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After Iran Visit, Iraqi President Received By Saudi King


This handout photograph released by the Iraqi President's Office on November 18, 2018 shows President Barham Saleh (L) being received by Saudi Arabia's King Salman in the Saudi capital Riyadh. (Photo by - / Iraqi Presidency Media Office / AFP)
This handout photograph released by the Iraqi President's Office on November 18, 2018 shows President Barham Saleh (L) being received by Saudi Arabia's King Salman in the Saudi capital Riyadh. (Photo by - / Iraqi Presidency Media Office / AFP)
Riyadh, Nov 18, 2018 (AFP)

Saudi King Salman welcomed Iraq's new President Barham Saleh Sunday on his first official visit to the kingdom, amid a warming of ties between the Arab neighbors after years of strain.

The king hosted a lunch and "discussed regional developments" with Saleh, the official Saudi Press Agency said, after the Iraqi leader's arrival in Riyadh following a visit to Saudi Arabia's arch-rival Iran.

Saleh, a 58-year-old moderate Kurd elected to the largely ceremonial role last month, was on an overnight visit at the invitation of the Saudi monarch, an Iraqi official said.

Separately, Iraq's Foreign Minister Mohammed Ali al-Hakim, who is part of Saleh's delegation, held talks in Riyadh with his Saudi counterpart Adel al-Jubeir, officials said.

Ties between Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia and Shiite-majority Iraq have been looking up in recent months, after years of tense relations.

After former dictator Saddam Hussein's August 1990 invasion of Kuwait, Riyadh severed relations with Baghdad and closed its border posts with its northern neighbor.

But a flurry of visits in recent months between the two countries has indicated a thawing of ties.

In October 2017, Saudi budget airline Flynas made the first commercial flight from Riyadh to Baghdad in 27 years.

Iraq is seeking economic benefits from closer ties with the wealthy kingdom as it looks to rebuild after the defeat of the Islamic State (IS) group.

Riyadh is keen to develop relations with Baghdad to counter the influence of regional rival Iran in Iraq.

"Both literally and figuratively, Iraq finds itself stuck between two competing neighbors: Saudi Arabia and Iran," columnist Abdulrahman al-Rashed wrote in the leading Saudi daily Arab News on Sunday.

"The tripartite relationship... is tangled and complex," he wrote.

"It remains to be seen how senior officials in Iraq decide they want to define this relationship and deal with the two governments."

Iran has been highly influential in Iraq since the toppling of Saddam in 2003, and it was a key partner in pushing back IS.

But Iran has also been accused of interference that has caused factionalism and poor governance in Iraq.

Saleh made his first official visit to Tehran on Saturday, where he met his Iranian counterpart Hassan Rouhani in a bid to boost bilateral trade.

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