qodsna.ir qodsna.ir

Pompeo to visit UAE to discuss arms sale, Israel normalisation

The Trump administration is trying to secure a $23bn arms sale in advanced weapons systems to the United Arab Emirates.

The U.S.Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will meet with the crown prince of Abu Dhabi on Saturday to discuss a planned multibillion-dollar arms deal between the United States and the United Arab Emirates, as well as the Persian Gulf nation’s newly normalised relations with Zionist regime.

 

In a statement this week, the US State Department said Pompeo would meet Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, often considered the country’s de facto ruler, to discuss the UAE-Israel deal “and other issues of bilateral concern including security cooperation and countering Iran’s malign influence in the region”.

 

Pompeo, who has refused to acknowledge US President Donald Trump’s election loss, has been on a foreign tour that has so far taken him to France, Turkey, Georgia and occupied territories – countries whose leaders have all congratulated President-elect Joe Biden for his victory.

 

“During the Trump administration, the United States and the United Arab Emirates relationship has grown deeper and broader than at any point before,” Pompeo said in the statement.

 

But the Trump administration’s plan to sell $23.3bn in weapons to Abu Dhabi, including F-35 aircraft and unmanned aerial systems, has drawn the ire of legislators in Washington, DC, who are trying to stop the transfer.

 

The arms sale comes after the UAE agreed to normalise relations with Israel in a deal that was brokered ahead of the US elections.

 

The UAE is one of three Arab nations to do so in the past few months, with Bahrain and Sudan also announcing deals with Israel at the behest of the Trump administration.

 

Democratic Senators Chris Murphy and Bob Menendez and Senator Rand Paul, a Republican, have criticised the arms sale to the Emirati government and put forward four bipartisan joint resolutions seeking to stop the deal.