Saudi Crown Prince seeks contracts and allies on Asia tour

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is expected to land in Islamabad and stay in Pakistan until on Monday.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is expected to land in Islamabad and stay in Pakistan until on Monday.
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AFP, Islamabad :
Saudi Arabia’s powerful crown prince arrives in Pakistan on Sunday, the start of an Asian tour during which he will seek lucrative contracts and demonstrate he still has allies five months after the Khashoggi affair.
Mohammed bin Salman, widely known as “MBS”, is expected to land in the capital Islamabad and stay in Pakistan until Monday.
His trip comes amid high tensions in the region: India and Saudi Arabia’s arch-rival Iran – both bordering Pakistan – have accused Islamabad of backing militant groups which have carried out bloody suicide attacks on their soil in recent days.
After Pakistan, MBS will travel to India, where he will meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Petroleum Minister Dharmendra Pradhan. He is expected to finish the trip with a visit to China on Thursday and Friday.
Two short stops initially scheduled for Sunday and Monday in Indonesia and Malaysia were postponed on Saturday without explanation.
The Asia trip comes five months after the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, a fierce critic of MBS, at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul ignited a diplomatic crisis.
Riyadh initially denied the murder, then gave several conflicting accounts of Khashoggi’s death, and now claims he was killed in an unauthorised operation.
Turkey said Friday it has not yet revealed all the information it has uncovered in the extraordinary case, which launched a global wave of revulsion and has profoundly tarnished the image of the kingdom, especially that of the crown prince.
But for analysts, the Asia tour – the largest outing on the international scene for the crown prince since his participation in the G20 summit in Argentina last December – is a timely demonstration to the West that he still has friends in rising Asia.
He “wants to demonstrate that he is not an international pariah”, said
James M. Dorsey, a researcher at the S. Rajaratnam School of International
It is a matter of proving that he still has “international access and he can function… as the most senior representative of Saudi Arabia beyond the king”.
Li Guofu, director of Middle East studies at the China Institute of International Studies, a government-affiliated think tank, noted that the Khashoggi case continues to cause indignation in Western countries, so visiting them would have been “inconvenient”.
“Not travelling to the West does not mean that he cannot come to the East. Saudi Arabia is also making strategic adjustments, and Asia is the new main direction of Saudi diplomacy,” he said.
Asian countries, he added, “have an important special characteristic -that is, we don’t interfere in the internal affairs of other countries”.
The prince’s trip also includes an important economic component.
“China is the largest buyer of Saudi crude, and Saudi Arabia’s other largest clients are all Asian: India, Japan, South Korea,” said Dorsey.
“Asia is a source of inward investment into Gulf energy and infrastructure investment; and the future growth of the global economy will be in Asia,” said Karen Young, an analyst with the American Enterprise Institute.
Saudi Arabia is not the only Gulf state to pivot east, she added – for all of them, it is a “logical shift”.
Taliban ‘in Islamabad’ –

As for Pakistan, where MBS will begin his tour and which is facing a
serious balance of payments crisis, it hopes its old ally will throw the
struggling economy a lifeline, specifically in the form of a $10-billion
investment in a refinery and oil complex in the southwest of the county.
Prime Minister Imran Khan has already visited Saudi Arabia twice since coming to power last summer.

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