December 7, 202211:05 AM ESTLast Updated a few seconds agoChina's Xi on 'epoch-making' visit to Saudi as Riyadh chafes at U.S. censure
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Eduardo Baptista[1/3] Chinese President Xi Jinping arrives in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, December 7, 2022. Saudi Press Agency/Handout via REUTERS
RIYADH,
Dec 7 (Reuters) - Chinese President Xi Jinping arrived in Saudi Arabia
on Wednesday on a visit Beijing hailed as its biggest diplomatic
initiative in the Arab world, as Riyadh expands global alliances beyond a longstanding partnership with the West.
The
meeting between the global economic powerhouse and Gulf energy giant
comes as Saudi ties with Washington are strained by U.S. criticism of
Riyadh's human rights record and Saudi support for oil output curbs
before the November midterm elections.
The White House
said on Wednesday that Xi's visit was an example of Chinese attempts to
exert influence and that this would not change U.S. policy towards the
Middle East.
"We
are mindful of the influence that China is trying to grow around the
world," White House National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby
told reporters.
China, the world's biggest energy consumer, is a major trade partner of Gulf oil and gas producers. Bilateral ties have expanded
under the region's economic diversification push, raising U.S. concerns
about growing Chinese involvement in sensitive infrastructure in the
Gulf.
Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman said on Wednesday that Riyadh would remain a "trusted and reliable" energy partner
for Beijing and that the two countries would boost cooperation in
energy supply chains by establishing a regional centre in the kingdom
for Chinese factories.
Saudi
Arabia is China's top oil supplier and Xi's visit takes place while
uncertainty hangs over energy markets after Western powers imposed a price cap on sales of oil from Russia, which has been increasing volumes to China with discounted oil.The Chinese delegation is expected to sign deals worth $30 billion with Riyadh, Saudi state media had said.
"EPOCH-MAKING VISIT"
Xi
was met on arrival by the governor of Riyadh, the kingdom's foreign
minister and the governor of sovereign wealth fund PIF. The Saudi
cabinet was meeting on Wednesday to approve the 2023 state budget of the
world's top oil exporter.
Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman is expected to offer Xi a lavish welcome, in
contrast with the low-key reception for U.S. President Joe Biden whose
censure of Saudi Arabia's de facto ruler formed the backdrop for a
strained meeting in July.
Xi
will hold bilateral talks with Saudi Arabia and Riyadh will later host a
wider meeting with Gulf Arab states and a summit with Arab leaders
which will be "an epoch-making milestone in the history of the
development of China-Arab relations", foreign ministry spokesperson Mao
Ning said.
Beijing hopes it will make a strong statement on strengthening "unity and cooperation", Mao added.
For
Riyadh, frustrated by what it sees as Washington's gradual
disengagement from the Middle East and a slow erosion of its security
guarantees, China offers an opportunity for economic gains without the
tensions which have come to cloud the U.S. relationship.
"Beijing
does not burden its partners with demands or political expectations and
refrains from interfering in their internal affairs," Saudi columnist
Abdulrahman Al-Rashed wrote in the Saudi-owned Asharq Al-Awsat
newspaper.
Unlike
Washington, Beijing retains good ties with Riyadh's regional rival
Iran, another supplier of oil to China, and has shown little interest in
addressing Saudi political or security concerns in the region.
Saudi
Arabia, birthplace of Islam, had supported China's policies in
Xinjiang, where the U.N. says human rights abuses have been committed
against Uyghurs and other Muslims.
Saudi
officials have said that regional security would be on the agenda
during Xi's visit. The United States has for decades been Saudi Arabia's
main security guarantor and remains its main defence supplier, but
Riyadh has chafed at restrictions on U.S. arms sales to the kingdom.
Riyadh
has said it would continue to expand partnerships to serve economic and
security interests, despite U.S. reservations about Gulf ties with both
Russia and China.
Reporting
by Eduardo Baptista in Beijing and Aziz El Yaakoubi in Riyadh;
Additional reporting by Ghaida Ghantous and Maha El Dahan in Dubai and
Steve Holland and Doina Chiacu in Washington; Writing by Dominic Evans
and Ghaida Ghantous; Editing by Nick Macfie and Toby Chopra