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Top Wall Street CEO’s Trying To Lower Gas Prices By Fixing Biden’s Saudi Arabia Mess Because He Won’t

New York Post

(New York Post) Some of Wall Street’s top CEOs spent the last week on a diplomatic mission to ­Saudi Arabia. It wasn’t touted as diplomacy, of course. The financiers who attended the Future Investment Initiative in ­Saudi Arabia, known as “Davos in the Desert,” are a well-scripted bunch who prefer to keep their dealings private whenever possible.

Tough luck. Word leaked to me that what went down was vastly more important than seminars on climate change or whatever else the globalist crowd likes to virtue-signal about.

 

Rather, I am told by people with knowledge of the matter that the real reason so many top CEOs attended the conference was to forge a truce between the Saudis and the Biden administration. The ongoing and very public bellicosity between the two longtime allies is bad for business, both the CEOs’ and that of the US.

True, Saudi Arabia is a big Wall Street client looking to further modernize its economy through investment-banking deals, while it turns to our financial sector to manage its riches. But the growing consensus among the people who run the US financial system is that having the Saudis as an enemy is among the biggest geo­political and economic mistakes of the mistake-prone Biden administration.

It will embolden the aims of our common enemy, the terrorist regime in Iran, and drive the Kingdom further into the hands of our rivals, Russia and especially China. (Reps from China flooded the conference this year, I am told, and not because they like the desert heat). Plus the bickering will do nothing to satisfy our ­energy needs and save Sleepy Joe Biden’s presidency.

Biden reportedly thought he and the Saudis had made a deal over the summer. Biden was reportedly blindsided when the Saudis and OPEC announced cuts to oil.Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

For the unacquainted, what goes down in Riyadh every year for ­almost a decade is very similar to the more established World Economic Forum confab in Davos, Switzerland. Running the show in Riyadh is a more controversial host than milquetoast globalist WEF chief Klaus Schwab.

It’s the crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman — known by haters and admirers alike as MBS. When MBS (now just 37) became the Kingdom’s de facto ruler a few years ago, he was in charge of a country with enormous oil wealth and vast economic potential.

Uneven record

He was also in charge of maintaining the somewhat uncomfortable relationship with us because of his country’s often lousy record on human rights. There were hopes the youthful new leader would enact reforms, soften the Kingdom’s anti-Democratic impulse and modernize its economy away from its reliance on crude.

Let’s just say it hasn’t gone down exactly that way. The crown prince instituted some much-needed changes, such as expanding women’s rights. The Kingdom’s giant oil company, Saudi Aramco, is venturing beyond fuel into areas such as tech. The Saudis have continued to support Israel’s existence, albeit tacitly, and remain an enemy of Iran.

MBS also put a slew of people he deemed potential rivals under house arrest immediately after taking control. Then presidential candidate Biden campaigned in 2020 to make Saudi Arabia a “pariah” nation because the Kingdom hasn’t shed its autocratic leanings, and because MBS is widely blamed for the assassination of a journalist critical of his regime, Jamal Khashoggi.

Oil prices have risen in price over the past few months. Many have criticized Biden’s lack of action to get the US more energy independent.Getty Images

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