Saudi
Arabia names new ambassador to US
AFP
RIYADH
Petroleumworld.com 01 30 06
Saudi Arabia on Monday announced that Adel al-Jubeir, an advisor to
King Abdullah, has been named as its new ambassador to the United
States, the oil-rich kingdom's top diplomatic posting.
Jubeir, also a former spokesman at the embassy in Washington, replaces
Prince Turki al-Faisal who resigned abruptly in December for what
he said were family reasons.
The appointment was announced by royal decree on Monday.
"In accordance with a request from Prince Turki al-Faisal bin
Abdul Aziz... to be discharged from his duties and in accordance with
a proposal from the foreign minister, we have ordered the nomination
of Adel bin Ahmed al-Jubeir as ambassador to the United States with
the rank of minister," said the decree, reported by the official
news agency SPA.
Jubeir, a diplomat fluent in English, French and German, is close
to Prince Turki's predecessor, Prince Bandar bin Sultan who occupied
the post for 20 years until July, 2005.
The Washington Post had said last year that Prince Turki had been
increasingly rumoured as a possible replacement for his brother, Foreign
Minister Saud al-Faisal, who it said was in fragile health.
When Prince Turki flew home after only 15 months in the crucial diplomatic
post, a source at the Saudi embassy said he had left after telling
staff he was quitting because he wanted to spend more time with his
family.
Oil-rich Saudi Arabia is regarded as a close regional ally of the
United States, although differences have emerged over Washington's
policy in violence-wracked Iraq.
Prince
Turki made a series of speeches last year urging Washington not to
withdraw its troops from Iraq precipitously, and repeatedly urged
the White House to try to break the deadlock in Israeli-Palestinian
peace talks.
Before taking up the Washington job in 2005, he spent nearly three
years as ambassador in Britain.
He also spent 25 years as the head of Saudi Arabia's intelligence
service.
In the 1980s, after the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan, Prince Turki
worked closely with Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, a Saudi, in organising
Muslim volunteers to join the Afghan insurgency.
In a November 2001 interview with the Saudi MBC television channel,
he confirmed meeting bin Laden several times in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan
before 1994.
After the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States, Prince
Turki was named in a civil suit in the US courts by the families of
victims seeking damages over his alleged role in financing bin Laden's
Al-Qaeda terror network. The lawsuit was dismissed in 2003.
Jubeir played a prominent role defending the kingdom in US media after
the attacks, as 19 of the suicide hijackers were Saudi nationals.
AFP
29 1709 GMT 01 07
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