Riyadh: US Defence Secretary Robert Gates arrived in Saudi Arabia yesterday to discuss efforts to put pressure on Iran, stabilise Yemen and to urge the Saudis to engage with Iraq ahead of the US withdrawal.
Gates, fresh from a three-day visit to Afghanistan, also may discuss Kabul's attempts to pursue reconciliation with Taliban insurgents.
US defence officials, briefing reporters ahead of the trip, said Gates will meet King Abdullah Bin Abdul Aziz and discuss US efforts to impose sanctions on Iran over its nuclear programme.
The Secretary will provide an update… about where we are in our Iran policy, as we've pivoted from the engagement track to the pressure track," said the official, who asked not to be named.
The United States has expanded land- and sea-based missile defence systems in and around the Gulf to counter what it sees as Iran's growing missile threat, and arms sales to Gulf allies have risen sharply in recent years.
Saudi Arabia bought $3.3 billion (Dh12.11 billion) in US arms in fiscal 2009, according to a Pentagon estimate. US officials did not expect new sales to be announced during Gates' trip.
"It's not lost on the Iranians all of the security cooperation that's been going on for years now and all the systems that have been purchased over the last several years, [are] all designed to counter-weight and protect against the growing threat posed by Iran," Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell said.
Gates, who may also meet the kingdom's crown prince, will press for Saudi engagement in Iraq, particularly as Washington prepares to withdraw its forces by the end of 2011.
King Abdullah has refused to meet Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Al Maliki or open a Saudi embassy in Baghdad.
Willing to engage
But the US defence official pointed to signals that the kingdom might be more willing to engage with Iraq, including Abdullah's recent meeting with former Iraqi prime minister Iyad Allawi, a leading figure in Sunday's election.
"Saudi Arabia's major concern in Iraq is that as [US forces] leave, Iran is going to fill in the void. And our answer then is: ‘Engage with the Iraqi government. Get a seat at the table'," a US official said.
Talks also were expected to include instability in Yemen, which US and Saudi officials fear Al Qaida is exploiting in order to use the country as a base to prepare attacks in the region and beyond.
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