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Canada to ask allies to help cool Saudi dispute; U.S. offers no aid


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Canada to ask allies to help cool Saudi dispute; U.S. offers no aid

By David Ljunggren

 

2018-08-07T184001Z_1_LYNXMPEE761JK_RTROPTP_4_NATO-SUMMIT.JPG

Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau holds a news conference in Brussels, Belgium July 12, 2018. REUTERS/Reinhard Krause

 

OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada plans to seek help from the United Arab Emirates and Britain to defuse an escalating dispute with Saudi Arabia, sources said on Tuesday, but close ally the United States made clear it would not get involved.

 

The Saudi government on Sunday recalled its ambassador to Ottawa, barred Canada's envoy from returning and placed a ban on new trade, denouncing Canada for urging the release of jailed rights activists. Riyadh accused Ottawa on Tuesday of interfering in its internal affairs.

 

One well placed source said the Liberal government of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau - which stresses the importance of human rights - planned to reach out to the United Arab Emirates.

 

"The key is to work with allies and friends in the region to cool things down, which can happen quickly," said the source, who declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the situation.

 

Another source said Canada would also seek help from Britain. The British government on Tuesday urged the two nations to show restraint.

 

The United States, traditionally one of Canada's most important friends, stayed on the sidelines. U.S. President Donald Trump - who criticized Trudeau after a Group of Seven summit in June - has forged tighter ties with Riyadh.

 

"Both sides need to diplomatically resolve this together. We can't do it for them; they need to resolve it together," U.S. State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert told a briefing.

 

The first Canadian source said Ottawa shared the view of foreign policy experts who believe the Saudi reaction reflected internal strains inside the kingdom, where 32-year-old Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is trying to push through domestic reforms.

The office of Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland did not respond to requests for comment.

 

The dispute looks set to damage what is a modest bilateral trade relationship worth nearly $4 billion a year. Canadian exports to Saudi Arabia totalled about $1.12 billion in 2017, or 0.2 percent of the total value of Canadian exports.

 

Canada says it does not know what will happen to a $13 billion defence contract to sell Canadian-made General Dynamics Corp armoured vehicles to Saudi Arabia.

 

European traders said the main Saudi wheat-buying agency had told grains exporters it will no longer accept Canadian-origin wheat and barley.

 

Saudi Arabia has also ordered roughly 15,000 Saudis studying in Canada to leave.

 

Canada's previous Conservative government, which lost power to the Liberals in 2015, also had challenges with Riyadh over human rights.

 

Thomas Juneau, an assistant professor and Middle East expert at the University of Ottawa, said Saudi irritation at the way the General Dynamics contract was handled also helped explain Riyadh's response.

 

The deal was agreed in 2014 by the Conservatives, who shared the Saudi desire for deeper relations, he said. But the task of approving the export permits fell to the Liberals, who were lobbied by human rights activists to say no.

 

The Liberals granted the permits but showed little interest in deepening ties with Riyadh amid growing civil society and media attacks on the agreement, Juneau added.

 

"That for Saudi Arabia was the source of growing frustration," he said in a phone interview. "(The ambassador) was very clear in saying he was irritated by what he saw as passivity by the Canadian government, which in his view was not resisting that criticism."

 

The first Canadian source said Ottawa had no regrets about speaking out on human rights in Saudi Arabia. Canada's ambassador, Dennis Horak, is not in Riyadh. The source said Saudi authorities were aware Horak was due to start a new posting next month.

 

(Additional reporting by William James in London, Daphne Psaledakis in Washington, Michael Hogan, Gus Trompiz and Maha El Dahan in Hamburg and Maher Chmaytelli in Dubai; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters 2018-08-08
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5 hours ago, Samui Bodoh said:

Canada. Fought alongside Americans, shedding blood and tears in partnership around the globe. NATO ally. The longest undefended border in the world. Major trading partners. Two countries that are the exception to the rule that countries don't have friends, only interests. Sheltered Americans when the Embassy in Tehran was over-run in 1979. Massive inter-marriage and cross-border ties. Democracies. NORAD. 

 

Saudi Arabia. Home of the 9/11 terrorists.

 

Trump/USA. 'We can't get involved'.

 

Idiots.

 

The US will not support Canada and Trudeau's Islamaphobic policies.

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57 minutes ago, Jonnapat said:

Canada has every right to expect assistance from it's closest ally.

I've long wondered why the US is so cosy with this archaic regime which cares not a fig for human rights.

Any decent President would act to try to mediate, but there again there is tRump.

Saudi Arabia is trumps ally, not canada, because the Saudis bought for $ 350 billion weapons. 

He does not know values such as friendship, reliability, sincerity, morality, human rights, sustainability, honesty, responsibility, humanity, etc.

 

Trump likes to sell his friends as long as there is enough money in for him.

The big military and oil companies then return the favor with many bookings in his overpriced hotels.

 

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9 hours ago, kamahele said:

With Trump in charge - America, with friends like you, who needs enemies....

Don't know but it would seem Canada has found one in Saudi Arabia. Don't know that Canada looked all that hard to find an enemy.

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14 hours ago, Sydebolle said:

Wonder what Ken Taylor would say if he would be still alive. He was the Canadian Ambassador who was involved in getting those US hostages out of Tehran in 1979.

The Canadians voiced their concerns over KSA‘s human rights and the Saudi prince went apeshit because of an inferiority complex. As mentioned before, it is time to teach them a lesson; over time they will settle matters over the table again - now it is about face, face and face again. 

Stopping scholarships in Canada for their own people (10‘000+ I was told) speaks for itself; how many Canadians study in the dunes? 

If KSA wants to be a member of the 21st century planet called Earth then accept the fact, that lashing and stoning is some gruesome stuff from the past. If Canada gives in, then they‘ve lost much more than the face (which is not important) but reinforces KSA‘s position and antiquated medieval way treating its very own citizen. 

Precisely, their human rights record ia disgusting, 600 people have been beheaded since 2014 and they crucified a man recently. I hate to think that Canadian principles are "up for sale", to hell with them.

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11 hours ago, IAMHERE said:

Don't know but it would seem Canada has found one in Saudi Arabia. Don't know that Canada looked all that hard to find an enemy.

Canada and Australia both were countries full to the brim of Red Greens, Bogans, and Trailer Park Boys clones. If not for massive influxes of immigration by both states they would be as backward now as they were 25 years ago. Both countries have been under the protection of states stronger than their own since forever, which has allowed them to build a false social infrastructure that doesn't account for their own defense, let alone anyone else's. Nice folks though, till they're all working for the Chinese. Somehow that will be America's fault.

Edited by lannarebirth
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