White House defends US-Saudi ‘strategic’ partnership, after Biden vowed to make country a ‘pariah’ state

White House defends US-Saudi ‘strategic’ partnership, after Biden vowed to make country a ‘pariah’ state

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The White House defended the Biden administration’s “strategic” partnership with Saudi Arabia, saying President Biden wants to “get peace” with the country — after vowing to make it a “pariah” state.

Biden, during a Democratic presidential primary debate in 2019, promised to make the kingdom a global “pariah” due to its mistreatment of human beings, violations of international law and open hostility to the U.S. — including the killing of a Washington Post journalist.

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“We were going to in fact make [Saudi Arabia] pay the price, and make them, in fact, the pariah that they are,” Biden said at the time.

Crown prince Mohammed bin Salman and Salman bin Abdulaziz al saud propaganda billboard in the street, Mecca province, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia on December 14, 2018 in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. (Eric Lafforgue/Art in All of Us/Corbis via Getty Images)

During the White House press briefing Tuesday, press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre was asked whether the president still seeks to make Saudi Arabia a “pariah.”

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“He said, as president, he believes that if there is any, any way to get peace, he feels like he should take that — that direction,” Jean-Pierre said. “So, Saudi Arabia has been a strategic partner of the United States for eight decades — every president since FDR has met with Saudi leaders, and the president considers Saudi Arabia an important partner on a host of regional and global strategies, including other efforts to end the war in Yemen, contain Iran and counterterrorism.”

Jean-Pierre added that “Saudi pilots flew with ours in the war against ISIS, its Navy patrols with ours in the Red Sea and the Gulf, and U.S. military personnel are based in Saudi Arabia.”

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“As I’ve said, the president will meet with any leader if it serves the interests of the American people,” she said. “That’s what he puts first.”

She added: “He believes engagement with Saudi leaders clearly meets that test, as has every president before him.”

Former President Trump visited Saudi Arabia during his first foreign trip as president and didn’t sour to the Arab nation after the killing of Saudi Arabia native and U.S.-based journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

New White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre has frequently stumbled since taking over the podium last month when Jenn Psaki left the administration to join MSNBC.
(AP)

Jean-Pierre’s remarks come after the Washington Post and the New York Times, last week, reported that Biden would travel to Saudi Arabia later this month — even amid his repeated promises to hold the country accountable for human rights violations.

Reports suggested Biden would meet with Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman.

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The White House and the president himself have said there is not a visit planned at this time, but Jean-Pierre on Monday said there was “a visit in the works.”

“But it wasn’t moved or postponed,” she said. “It was that the reporting is actually not accurate.”

“We were still having discussions,” she continued.