CNN :
Both allies and enemies alike of Donald Trump are bracing themselves this week for foreign policy bombshells dropped by a furious US President lashing out over his election defeat.
While Trump wages a legal fight at home over what he falsely alleges is election fraud, he announced a precipitous drawdown of US troops in Afghanistan, recklessly fulfilling a campaign promise.
The Afghan government fears the move puts their country in danger of being overrun by the Taliban, while even some in the President’s own party have questioned his intent. Republican Congressman Adam Kinzinger condemned the order as “an attempt to hobble the next administration.”
Kinzinger, a former US airman who flew combat missions in Afghanistan, warned that those troops who remain can do little except protect themselves. “With 2,500 troops all you have left is enough troops to defend the remaining troops,” he told CNN’s New Day on Wednesday.
Meanwhile in Iraq, where Trump has also ordered a drawdown of troops, talks between the US general in charge of coalition forces and the Iraqi government over how and when to do that are slowed by Iraqi concerns of security implications.
Anticipation of what Trump might do next is building toward the weekend when Saudi Arabia hosts the G20 summit of the world’s top economic powers in the Kingdom’s futuristic city in the making, Neom.
Trump is spared the humiliation of being paraded as a loser in person in front of other world leaders, with the summit being held virtually due to Covid-19 pandemic. It’s not even clear yet if he will even speak by videolink, although Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will be there.
A virtual summit is not what Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman, usually known by his initials MBS, and his elderly father King Salman would have liked. Despite MBS’s bad rap over his rapid consolidation of power and, according to the CIA, responsibility for the killing of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi
(an allegation consistently denied by the Saudis), Saudi Arabia under his de facto leadership has made progress on many fronts.
MBS has sidelined the religious police, paving the way for previously illegal music concerts, and he’s relaxed guardianship laws over women, giving them the right to drive. The G20 would have been a major opportunity for MBS to showcase these changes and airbrush his image, so tarnished around the world.
With Joe Biden on the way to the White House, even more change may be coming, one senior Saudi diplomat told CNN some prisoners including Canadian-educated women’s rights activist Loujain Alhathloul could be released.
But concerns in the region are mounting that Trump, who bragged to biographer Bob Woodward that he “saved his [MBS’s] ass” following Khashoggi’s murder, may be about to deliver the royal family another favor. This could be a move to designate the Saudis’ enemies in Yemen-the Houthis-a terrorist organization, boxing in Biden’s leverage over Saudi and further complicating his dealings with Iran.
Both allies and enemies alike of Donald Trump are bracing themselves this week for foreign policy bombshells dropped by a furious US President lashing out over his election defeat.
While Trump wages a legal fight at home over what he falsely alleges is election fraud, he announced a precipitous drawdown of US troops in Afghanistan, recklessly fulfilling a campaign promise.
The Afghan government fears the move puts their country in danger of being overrun by the Taliban, while even some in the President’s own party have questioned his intent. Republican Congressman Adam Kinzinger condemned the order as “an attempt to hobble the next administration.”
Kinzinger, a former US airman who flew combat missions in Afghanistan, warned that those troops who remain can do little except protect themselves. “With 2,500 troops all you have left is enough troops to defend the remaining troops,” he told CNN’s New Day on Wednesday.
Meanwhile in Iraq, where Trump has also ordered a drawdown of troops, talks between the US general in charge of coalition forces and the Iraqi government over how and when to do that are slowed by Iraqi concerns of security implications.
Anticipation of what Trump might do next is building toward the weekend when Saudi Arabia hosts the G20 summit of the world’s top economic powers in the Kingdom’s futuristic city in the making, Neom.
Trump is spared the humiliation of being paraded as a loser in person in front of other world leaders, with the summit being held virtually due to Covid-19 pandemic. It’s not even clear yet if he will even speak by videolink, although Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will be there.
A virtual summit is not what Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman, usually known by his initials MBS, and his elderly father King Salman would have liked. Despite MBS’s bad rap over his rapid consolidation of power and, according to the CIA, responsibility for the killing of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi
(an allegation consistently denied by the Saudis), Saudi Arabia under his de facto leadership has made progress on many fronts.
MBS has sidelined the religious police, paving the way for previously illegal music concerts, and he’s relaxed guardianship laws over women, giving them the right to drive. The G20 would have been a major opportunity for MBS to showcase these changes and airbrush his image, so tarnished around the world.
With Joe Biden on the way to the White House, even more change may be coming, one senior Saudi diplomat told CNN some prisoners including Canadian-educated women’s rights activist Loujain Alhathloul could be released.
But concerns in the region are mounting that Trump, who bragged to biographer Bob Woodward that he “saved his [MBS’s] ass” following Khashoggi’s murder, may be about to deliver the royal family another favor. This could be a move to designate the Saudis’ enemies in Yemen-the Houthis-a terrorist organization, boxing in Biden’s leverage over Saudi and further complicating his dealings with Iran.