Iraq’s New President Meets Saudi King After Visiting Iran

RIYADH — Saudi Arabia’s King Salman received Iraq’s president in Riyadh on Sunday, a day after the Iraqi official visited the king­dom’s rival, Iran.

Barham Salih’s back-to-back visits to Iran and Saudi Arabia reflect the delicate balance Iraq seeks to maintain in a region where its two powerful neigh­bours are battling for supremacy.

Salih was received at the airport in Riyadh by the province’s gover­nor and other Saudi officials. King Salman held a lunch in honour of the Iraqi president with ministers and high-level princes in attendance.

Salih, a 58-year-old moderate Kurd elected to the largely ceremo­nial role last month, was on an over­night visit at the invitation of the Saudi monarch, an Iraqi official said.

The state-run Saudi Press Agency released few details about Salih’s talks with the monarch.

On Saturday, Salih was in Tehran where he pledged to im­prove trade ties less than two weeks after the US restored oil sanctions that had been lifted un­der the 2015 nuclear accord.

Iran has had major influence over Iraq since the 2003 US-led in­vasion toppled Saddam Hussein, and is a key supplier of electric­ity, gas and goods to Iraqi mar­kets. The two countries on Satur­day vowed to expand trade to $20 billion a year, from $8.5 billion in 2018, despite the punishing US sanctions against Iran.

Iraq is Iran’s second-largest market after China, buying every­thing from food and machinery to electricity and natural gas.

But Saudi Arabia has been steadily courting Iraq in recent years, following a quarter-centu­ry estrangement brought about by Iraq’s 1990 invasion of Kuwait.

In October 2017, Saudi bud­get airline flynas made the first commercial flight from Riyadh to Baghdad in 27 years.

Earlier this month, Saudi Arabia’s oil minister was in Baghdad to discuss stabilising oil prices in the wake of the latest US sanctions against Iran.

A flurry of meetings between Saudi officials and the new Iraqi government of Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi Riyadh in re­cent weeks suggest the Gulf king­dom is aiming to counter Iran’s economic footprint in Iraq.

“Both literally and figuratively, Iraq finds itself stuck between two competing neighbours: Saudi Ara­bia and Iran,” columnist Abdulrah­man al-Rashed wrote in the leading Saudi daily Arab News on Sunday.

“The tripartite relationship … is tangled and complex,” he wrote. “It remains to be seen how senior officials in Iraq decide they want to define this relationship and deal with the two governments.”

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