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Saudi Arabian air force pilot, Prince Khaled bin Salman, as he sits in the cockpit of a fighter jet at an undisclosed location, after taking part in a mission to strike Islamic State (IS) group targets in Syria. Prince Khaled bin Salman, son of current King Salman, was named by Saudi Arabia on April 22, 2017 as ambassador to its major ally the United States in Washington, with which ties are improving under President Donald Trump. Image Credit: SPA/AFP

Riyadh: Saudi Arabia on Saturday named an air force pilot son of King Salman as ambassador to its major ally Washington, with which ties are improving under President Donald Trump.

“Prince Abdullah Bin Faisal Bin Turki removed as ambassador to the US. Prince Khalid Bin Salman Bin Abdul Aziz appointed ambassador”, the official Saudi Press Agency reported, citing a royal order.

Prince Abdullah had served in the post for just over a year, according to the website of the Saudi embassy in Washington.

The United States and Saudi Arabia have a decades-old relationship.

But ties between Riyadh and Washington became increasingly frayed during the administration of president Barack Obama.

Saudi leaders felt Obama was reluctant to get involved in the civil war in Syria and was tilting toward Riyadh’s regional rival Iran.

The Saudis have found a more favourable ear in Washington under Trump, who took office in January and has denounced Iran’s “harmful influence” in the Middle East.

Washington provides some logistical and intelligence support, as well as weapons, for a Saudi-led coalition fighting Iran-backed rebels in Yemen.

The kingdom also belongs to the US-led coalition against the Daesh group in Iraq and Syria.

Prince Khalid, the new ambassador, is an air force pilot who flew missions as part of the Saudi contribution to the anti-Daesh coalition, said Salman Al Ansari, the president of the Saudi American Public Relation Affairs Committee (SAPRAC).

Al Ansari, whose committee is a private initiative to strengthen Saudi-US ties, described Prince Khalid as a “very organised personality, savvy, youthful, and active.”

Another son of King Salman, Deputy Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman, 31, is second in line to the throne and is one of the kingdom’s most powerful figures.

He holds the post of defence minister and is pushing a wide-ranging social and economic reform programme.

US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis visited Riyadh on Wednesday and said it was in Washington’s interest “to see a strong Saudi Arabia”. He pointed to the kingdom’s “military security services and secret services”.