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  • political dissent
    Kuwait, Fighting Dissent From Within, Revokes Citizenship

    As tensions in the country have been growing, analysts said, the revocations have raised concerns that Kuwait is also taking cues from some of its more repressive neighbors in the region, including some that have won praise from the United States for joining the military campaign against the Islamic State.

  • Industry
    Aramco Refinery With Sinopec Said to Start Hydrocracker in 2015

    Yasref, as the joint-venture refinery is known, will produce low-sulfur diesel for export and have the fuel available for sale next year, the people said. The lower the sulfur content in diesel, the cleaner it is as a transport fuel. Yasref’s diesel will meet European specifications, the people said. Yasref media officials were unable to comment immediately by phone today.

  • KSA and Syria
    KSA Shoulder-to-Shoulder with Coalition to Destroy IS – Prince Mohammed

    Wiping out ‘IS’ is just one step towards a more general and comprehensive goal: an end to the bloodshed in Syria; an inclusive, independent, non-sectarian government in Iraq and a just settlement for the Palestinian people whose desperate plight remains at the centre of Saudi foreign policy. Peace, a just peace for the Palestinians is the only way forward.

  • U.S. Crisis Response Force
    New crisis response force gets ready to deploy to Middle East

    There is great concern among U.S. officials about potential attacks against American personnel and facilities in the Middle East. In recent months, the Pentagon has deployed hundreds of extra troops to Iraq to guard against possible terrorist attacks against the U.S. embassy in Baghdad and other critical facilities. The American embassy in Yemen is also under threat from militants.

  • Gulf Stock Markets
    Funds to slow Saudi stock buying, bullish on UAE -survey

    Bullishness towards Saudi Arabia peaked in the July survey, days after the stock market regulator announced it would open the market to direct foreign investment early next year. Since then, sentiment towards the market has been declining, partly because sharp gains in stock prices have left many of them looking fully valued for now. The main index is up 10 percent since the announcement but has pulled back from its peaks in the past week.

  • U.S. Petroleum Liquids
    US poised to become world’s leading liquid petroleum producer

    US crude oil production in August was still lower than either Saudi Arabia’s, at about 9.7m b/d, or Russia’s at 10.1m b/d. The overall US leadership in petroleum is accounted for by its higher production of natural gas liquids such as ethane and propane, which have a lower energy content and are often used as feedstocks for the petrochemical industry rather than for fuel. Still, on current trends the US could catch up with Saudi Arabia and Russia on crude production alone by the end of the decade.

  • Twitter and Iran
    Arab Twitter users dislike Iran even more than they dislike the US

    “We found that as Iran intervened or was perceived to intervene in Syria and elsewhere [in 2012 and 2013], hostilities toward Iran on Twitter from Arab users increased,” Robert Keohane, a Princeton professor of international affairs and a co-author of the paper, told Quartz. “This, I think, was yet more evidence that it doesn’t matter if it’s Shiite Iran or the US or another power in the future—the non-Arab military interventionist power in the region is a target for this sentiment.”

  • Saudi Educational System
    63 pct. of Saudi students in majors ‘unsuitable’ for market

    Only 9 percent of high school graduates have taken up technical and vocational programs in the kingdom compared with 41 percent in OECD member countries and 37 percent in Turkey. The global average of students who join technical and vocational colleges is 40 percent.

  • Oil
    Shale, Saudi Arabia and Islamic State Leave Oil Bulls Sweating

    There was a time when headlines about jets bombing Middle Eastern refineries would have sent oil prices soaring. Granted, Islamic State's facilities aren't exactly world class. But it is telling that such violence is doing little to lift the price of crude. Brent is down 13% this year and looks set to post its weakest yearly average price since 2010, before the Arab Spring really got going.

  • Iraq's Army
    Pentagon says it will take years to retrain Iraqi forces. Why so long?

    The assassination and intimidation campaign waged by Islamist militants, as well as the cronyism practiced by the former Iraqi prime minister, have led to an erosion of confidence, says the retired general who took command of the training effort for Iraqi security forces in 2007.