Emmanuel Macron hosts Saudi crown prince with oil, Iran, rights on agenda

Visit to Paris comes two weeks Saudi crown prince he held talks in Saudi Arabia with US President Joe Biden

By
Reuters
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Saudi Crown Prince, Mohammed bin Salman receives French President Emmanuel Macron in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, December 4, 2021. — Courtesy of Saudi Royal Court/Handout via Reuters
Saudi Crown Prince, Mohammed bin Salman receives French President Emmanuel Macron in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, December 4, 2021. — Courtesy of Saudi Royal Court/Handout via Reuters

  • Visit to Paris comes two weeks Saudi crown prince he held talks in Saudi Arabia with US President Joe Biden. 
  • French Opposition figures and human rights groups have criticised Macron's decision to invite to dinner at the Elysee Palace .
  • West is keen to reset relations with the Gulf Arab oil giant as it seeks to counter the rising regional influence of Iran, Russia and China.


PARIS: French President Emmanuel Macron hosts Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on Thursday, part of increased Western efforts to court the major oil-producing state amid the war in Ukraine and faltering talks to revive a nuclear deal with Iran.

French Opposition figures and human rights groups have criticised Macron's decision to invite to dinner at the Elysee Palace a man Western leaders believe ordered the murder in 2018 of prominent Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

The visit to Paris by the de facto Saudi ruler, widely known as MbS, comes two weeks after he held talks in Saudi Arabia with US President Joe Biden. The West is keen to reset relations with the Gulf Arab oil giant as it seeks to counter the rising regional influence of Iran, Russia and China.

"The rehabilitation of the murderous prince will be justified in France as in the United States by arguments of realpolitik. But it's actually bargaining that predominates, let's face it," Amnesty International Secretary General Agnes Callamard said on Twitter ahead of Prince Mohammed's visit.

France and other European countries are looking to diversify their sources of energy following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which has seen Moscow cut gas supplies to Europe. Macron wants Riyadh, the world's largest oil exporter, to raise production.

Government spokesperson Olivier Veran dismissed rights groups' concerns about Macron hosting MbS, telling reporters on Thursday the French president would not set aside his country's values in talks with the Saudi leader, but that they would be held "while working to get oil access for the whole world."

Macron also views the kingdom as vital to helping forge a broader Middle East peace dialogue between Iran and US-backed adversaries despite talks to revive Tehran's 2015 nuclear accord having stalled with no signs of a possible breakthrough.

France is one of Riyadh's main arms suppliers but has faced growing pressure to review its sales because of the humanitarian crisis, the world's worst, in Yemen where a Saudi-led coalition has been fighting Houthi rebels since 2015.

Macron, who last December became the first Western leader to visit Saudi Arabia since the Khashoggi affair, has dismissed criticism of his efforts to engage MbS by saying the kingdom is too important to be ignored.