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Saudi oil minister talks of need to strengthen links on Iraq visit

Saudi oil minister talks of need to strengthen links on Iraq visit
Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih speaks to reporters during the 7th Iraq Oil and Gas Show in Basra this week. Ƶ and Iraq are boosting ties. (AP)
Updated 05 December 2017

Saudi oil minister talks of need to strengthen links on Iraq visit

Saudi oil minister talks of need to strengthen links on Iraq visit

BASRA: In the latest sign of improving relations between Iraq and Ƶ, the Kingdom’s oil minister attended an energy conference in the southern Iraqi port city of Basra on Tuesday.
Khalid Al-Falih said Ƶ wants to expand investment projects in Iraq to include energy, manufacturing and natural resources.
“These are all considered important steps in bringing Iraq back to the Arab fold as well as to open Iraqi markets for international goods,” Al-Falih said. “We see our cooperation and coordination as very strategic and crucial for both of our countries. It doubles our success, growth and prosperity, again and again.”
Iraq is looking for regional support as the country struggles to rebuild after ousting the Daesh group from major cities and as it deals with an independence movement in its northern Kurdish region.
The US has encouraged Baghdad to improve relations with Ƶ to counter Tehran’s influence in the region. US President Donald Trump’s administration views Iran as a regional menace.
Ƶ’s oil minister visited Baghdad in October, making a high-profile speech in the Iraqi capital calling for greater economic cooperation. That same month a commercial Ƶn airliner landed at Baghdad airport for the first time in 27 years, and in August the two countries announced plans to open the land crossing along their shared border.
Iraq and Ƶ have had strained relations since the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990. Iran gained wide influence over the Shiite-majority country after the 2003 US-led invasion. Tensions between Riyadh and Baghdad only began to thaw in 2015, when Ƶ reopened its embassy.
Ƶ is the biggest oil producer in OPEC, followed by Iraq.