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Page added on May 21, 2012

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Saudi Arabia’s Bond With U.S. Goes Beyond Energy

The U.S. and Saudi Arabia have a close relationship with a bond “that goes far beyond energy,” Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said.

The minister told graduates during his commencement speech at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, that “We seek together a world of greater understanding, mutual tolerance, and respect for human dignity and personal interdependence.”

Al-Naimi, who said he grew up as a nomadic Bedouin, studied geology and graduated from Lehigh in 1962. The minister said he was one of a very few Saudis who studied in the U.S., when he came to Lehigh in 1959. Now, there are thousands, he said.

“I hope my visit here today is a further sign of that enduring bond between our two peoples,” he said.

Al-Naimi, who will represent OPEC’s biggest oil producer when the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries meets next month in Vienna, has said in recent weeks that prices are too high given that there is no lack of supply. Brent crude should be at around $100 a barrel, he said in Adelaide, Australia, on May 13.

Brent traded at $108.29 at 12:08 p.m. today on the London- based ICE Futures Europe exchange.

Bloomberg



4 Comments on "Saudi Arabia’s Bond With U.S. Goes Beyond Energy"

  1. BillT on Tue, 22nd May 2012 3:05 am 

    The Empire and it’s pet Dictatorship…

  2. chukuudensi on Tue, 22nd May 2012 3:43 pm 

    Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said
    (Brent)oil prices are too high, and THE PRICE OF Brent should not be more than $100 a barrel, given that there is no shortage of supply. If he said this, his statement should be seen as a big blow to Economics and the concept of supply and demand. If the convergence of supply and demand can not determine equitable price what can?
    Could there be other factors The Theory of supply and demand did not contemplate i.e. Politics, whether the product in question is the mainstay or a product from third world nations? Want to hear the honourable minister’s comment again.

    CHUKU UDENSI
    nIGERIA.

  3. JohnRM on Tue, 22nd May 2012 7:46 pm 

    Yea, as soon as Arabia is out of oil, this relationship is over.

  4. C. Paul Davis on Tue, 22nd May 2012 11:20 pm 

    How can anyone believe this when they never tell you the truth?

    Paul

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