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Obama to host Gulf leaders in May
By AFP - Apr 18,2015 - Last updated at Apr 18,2015
WASHINGTON (AFP) — US President Barack Obama will welcome the six leaders of the Gulf Cooperation Council kingdoms in mid-May for talks on Iran's nuclear programme and the conflicts in Yemen, Iraq and Syria.
The White House said the May 13 meetings at the White House and May 14 gathering at Camp David "will be an opportunity for the leaders to discuss ways to enhance their partnership and deepen security cooperation”.
The meeting was announced in early April by Obama, who is seeking to reassure Gulf states following a framework accord reached on Tehran's contested nuclear programme earlier in the month.
Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia fears its regional rival Iran, which has a Shiite government, will continue to develop an atomic bomb after the sanctions that are strangling Iran's economy are lifted.
Meanwhile, last month, a Saudi-led coalition launched air strikes in Yemen against the allegedly Iranian-backed Shiite rebels fighting Yemeni forces.
The White House will welcome the leaders of Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates during the May meetings.
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Gulf Arab leaders will meet in Saudi Arabia next week to prepare for a May summit with US President Barack Obama, Kuwait's foreign minister was quoted as saying, with the summit expected to touch on Iran's nuclear programme and developments in Yemen.
US Secretary of State John Kerry flies to Riyadh this week to reassure King Salman that any nuclear deal with Iran is in Saudi Arabia's interest, despite the country's fears it may boost its rival's support for Shiite Muslim interests in the region.
With Iran emboldened and the United States seen in retreat, President Barack Obama faces the vexed task of restoring lost trust and influence when he hosts Gulf leaders at Camp David next week.