Scoop: Biden advisers weigh Saudi Arabia trip for more oil
Then-Vice
President Joe Biden looks on in May 2015 as President Obama meets in
the Oval Office with Mohammed bin Salman and other Saudi officials.
Photo: Olivier Douliery/White House Pool (ISP Pool Images)/Corbis/VCG
via Getty Images
President
Biden’s advisers are discussing a possible visit to Saudi Arabia this
spring to help repair relations and convince the Kingdom to pump more
oil, Axios has learned.
Why it matters: A
hat-in-hand trip would illustrate the gravity of the global energy
crisis driven by Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Biden has chastised Saudi
Arabia, and the CIA believes its de facto leader, Crown Prince Mohammed
bin Salman, was involved in the dismemberment of Washington Post
columnist Jamal Khashoggi.
- The possibility also shows how
Russia's invasion is scrambling world's alliances, forcing the U.S. to
reorder its priorities — and potentially recalibrating its emphasis on
human rights.
- Biden officials are in Venezuela this weekend to
meet with the government of President Nicolás Maduro. Some Republicans
and Democrats in Washington suggest Venezuela's oil could replace
Russia's, according to the New York Times.
- Any visit to the Persian Gulf would come amid a busy presidential travel schedule during the next few months.
- Biden will likely take trips to Japan, Spain, Germany and, potentially, Israel, Axios has also learned.
What they're saying:
A White House spokesperson told Axios: “We don’t have any international
travel to announce at this time, and a lot of this is premature
speculation.”
Zoom out: President Obama visited
Saudi Arabia more often than any of his predecessors, a total of four
trips, but relations frayed over the wars in Yemen and Syria, as well as
differences about how to deal with Iran.
- President Trump made restoring the relationship a priority, and boasted about arms sales to the Kingdom.
- He
questioned the CIA's conclusion bin Salman was involved in Khashoggi's
murder and defiantly refused to condemn him. "Maybe he did and maybe he
didn’t!” Trump wrote on Twitter.
- During the 2020 campaign, Biden called the Kingdom a "pariah," and early in his term, released an unclassified report assessing MBS approved the operation to "capture or kill" Khashoggi.
Zoom in: Bin Salman isn't making it easier on Biden to repair their relations.
He appeared to go out of his way to aggravate the White House during an interview with the Atlantic published last week.
- “We don’t have the right to lecture you in America,” he said. “The same goes the other way.”
Between the lines:
Sanctions against Russia's oil exports — including a possible ban on
importing Russian oil into the U.S. — would both elevate worldwide gas
prices and stoke domestic inflation.
- Biden officials want to
preserve options for the president, including the chance to make amends
with the Saudis and persuade them to increase their oil production.
- Discussions
about a potential visit are still in the early phases and officials
cautioned a visit is far from finalized and may not happen.
The big picture: Russia's actions are also factoring into the president's other planned travel.
The
invasion has sparked an international refugee crisis and raised
worldwide prices, so the president wants to ensure U.S. allies remain
united. His in-person attendance at summit meetings also highlights how
concern about COVID-19 has waned.
- Biden's first trip this
year is likely to Japan, potentially in May. He's set to meet with the
other leaders of the Quad: Japan, India and Australia.
- In June, he's scheduled to attend a G7 meeting in Germany. That will be followed by a NATO summit in Spain.
- The European itinerary could also be expanded to include a stop in Israel, where Biden told Prime Minister Naftali Bennett he wanted to visit this spring.
Scoop: Biden advisers weigh Saudi Arabia trip for more oil
Then-Vice
President Joe Biden looks on in May 2015 as President Obama meets in
the Oval Office with Mohammed bin Salman and other Saudi officials.
Photo: Olivier Douliery/White House Pool (ISP Pool Images)/Corbis/VCG
via Getty Images
President
Biden’s advisers are discussing a possible visit to Saudi Arabia this
spring to help repair relations and convince the Kingdom to pump more
oil, Axios has learned.
Why it matters: A
hat-in-hand trip would illustrate the gravity of the global energy
crisis driven by Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Biden has chastised Saudi
Arabia, and the CIA believes its de facto leader, Crown Prince Mohammed
bin Salman, was involved in the dismemberment of Washington Post
columnist Jamal Khashoggi.
- The possibility also shows how
Russia's invasion is scrambling world's alliances, forcing the U.S. to
reorder its priorities — and potentially recalibrating its emphasis on
human rights.
- Biden officials are in Venezuela this weekend to
meet with the government of President Nicolás Maduro. Some Republicans
and Democrats in Washington suggest Venezuela's oil could replace
Russia's, according to the New York Times.
- Any visit to the Persian Gulf would come amid a busy presidential travel schedule during the next few months.
- Biden will likely take trips to Japan, Spain, Germany and, potentially, Israel, Axios has also learned.
What they're saying:
A White House spokesperson told Axios: “We don’t have any international
travel to announce at this time, and a lot of this is premature
speculation.”
Zoom out: President Obama visited
Saudi Arabia more often than any of his predecessors, a total of four
trips, but relations frayed over the wars in Yemen and Syria, as well as
differences about how to deal with Iran.
- President Trump made restoring the relationship a priority, and boasted about arms sales to the Kingdom.
- He
questioned the CIA's conclusion bin Salman was involved in Khashoggi's
murder and defiantly refused to condemn him. "Maybe he did and maybe he
didn’t!” Trump wrote on Twitter.
- During the 2020 campaign, Biden called the Kingdom a "pariah," and early in his term, released an unclassified report assessing MBS approved the operation to "capture or kill" Khashoggi.
Zoom in: Bin Salman isn't making it easier on Biden to repair their relations.
He appeared to go out of his way to aggravate the White House during an interview with the Atlantic published last week.
- “We don’t have the right to lecture you in America,” he said. “The same goes the other way.”
Between the lines:
Sanctions against Russia's oil exports — including a possible ban on
importing Russian oil into the U.S. — would both elevate worldwide gas
prices and stoke domestic inflation.
- Biden officials want to
preserve options for the president, including the chance to make amends
with the Saudis and persuade them to increase their oil production.
- Discussions
about a potential visit are still in the early phases and officials
cautioned a visit is far from finalized and may not happen.
The big picture: Russia's actions are also factoring into the president's other planned travel.
The
invasion has sparked an international refugee crisis and raised
worldwide prices, so the president wants to ensure U.S. allies remain
united. His in-person attendance at summit meetings also highlights how
concern about COVID-19 has waned.
- Biden's first trip this
year is likely to Japan, potentially in May. He's set to meet with the
other leaders of the Quad: Japan, India and Australia.
- In June, he's scheduled to attend a G7 meeting in Germany. That will be followed by a NATO summit in Spain.
- The European itinerary could also be expanded to include a stop in Israel, where Biden told Prime Minister Naftali Bennett he wanted to visit this spring.