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Scratching the surface on the issues affecting U.S.-Saudi relations today + much more – The 966 Episode 36
- April 22,2022
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- SUSTG Team
Episode 36! The hosts scratch the surface on some issues affecting U.S.-Saudi relations – both now and in the past – and talk about the status of the U.S.-Saudi relationship today. First, the hosts talk about a recent op-ed by Prince Turki al-Faisal, ‘America should laugh with the Kingdom, not scowl’, amid U.S. media criticism […]
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Saudi foreign policy, globalization, and the ‘shrapnel’ from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine with Afshin Molavi from Johns Hopkins SAIS
- April 15,2022
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- SUSTG Team
Episode 35 of The 966 includes a terrific conversation with author, thought leader, and emerging markets expert Afshin Molavi, Senior fellow at the Foreign Policy Institute of the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), and founder and editor of the Emerging World newsletter (eworld.substack.com). The hosts talk with Afshin about his recent piece, ‘Putin’s […]
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Energy, hydrogen, and more with Phillip Cornell from The Economist Impact and the Atlantic Council and much more…
- April 8,2022
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- SUSTG Team
In Episode 34, The hosts welcome Phillip Cornell, senior fellow, Global Energy Center at the Atlantic Council, and Principal for Energy and Sustainability at the Economist Impact, and brings over 15 years of international experience in private and public sectors (World Bank, IEA, Aramco, NATO, Dow Jones) onto The 966 to talk about the global […]
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Former USMTM Chief Col. Brad Gandy Joins The 966 to Talk U.S.-Saudi Defense, Security Partnership and More
- April 1,2022
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- SUSTG Team
Episode 33! On last week’s episode, we talked about the huge transformation going on in Saudi Arabia’s military and USMTM’s role in it with author Bilal Saab, who has a book coming out on the subject. This week, the head of the USMTM from 2019-2021, Col. Brad Gandy, who heard last week’s episode and agreed […]
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A discussion with author Dr. Mark Thompson on the power and potential of Saudi youth on The 966 episode 30
- March 11,2022
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- SUSTG Team
The hosts welcome Dr. Mark Thompson from Riyadh. The hosts discuss Mark’s latest book, “Being Young, Male, and Saudi,” as well as his deep experiences living and teaching in the Kingdom. Before that, the hosts discuss why U.S. shale will not be saving the day any time soon, and also an encouraging new survey from […]
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Security and Defense Expert David Des Roches Joins The 966 to Talk Ukraine and the Middle East
- March 4,2022
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- SUSTG Team
The hosts invite NDU professor and security expert Col. David Des Roches (Ret.) back on the program for episode 29 to discuss Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and how it impacts the Middle East, as well as the changing role of NATO and energy markets. The hosts and Des Roches also discuss Lucid’s new plant in […]
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Veteran Saudi Journalist Khaled Almaeena Joins The 966 to Talk Ukraine, Energy Markets, and More
- February 25,2022
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- SUSTG Team
Khaled Al-Maeena, Saudi journalist, commentator, businessman and the former editor-in-chief of the Saudi Gazette and Arab News joins The 966 for Episode 28 to talk about Saudi Arabia’s role in energy markets, the war in Ukraine, and much more.
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Amr Khashoggi joins The 966 to talk Saudi foreign policy, Vision 2030 and more
- February 18,2022
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- SUSTG Team
Saudi businessman and philanthropist Amr Khashoggi, chairman of Amkest Group, joins The 966 to talk about some interesting developments in the mining and minerals sector in Saudi Arabia, the red hot Saudi IPO market, Saudi foreign policy, Saudi Arabia’s economy and Vision 2030 and many more topics in episode 27 of the program.
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Jadwa Investment: Saudi GDP to Grow 7.7% in 2022
- February 17,2022
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- SUSTG Team
Saudi Arabia’s economy will “exhibit strong levels of growth in 2022, as pandemic related uncertainty and volatility seen over the last couple of years diminishes,” according to a new report from Riyadh-based Jadwa Investment, which said that the Kingdom’s overall GDP will expand by 7.7 percent in 2022.
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Dazzling Finish to Saudi International as Harold Varner III Sinks Near 100-Foot Eagle Putt to Win
- February 7,2022
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- SUSTG Team
American Harold Varner III made a fantastic eagle putt on the final hole to hold off left-handed Bubba Watson and claim a one-stroke victory at the Saudi International on Sunday.
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G7 foreign ministers meet in Canada amid tensions with Trump
Foreign ministers of leading Western democracies meet in Canada on Thursday after seven weeks of rising tensions between U.S. allies and President Donald Trump over his upending of foreign policy on Ukraine and imposing of tariffs. The Group of Seven ministers from Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States, along with the EU, meet in the remote tourist town of La Malbaie, nestled in the Quebec hills for two days of meetings that in the past have broadly been consensual on the issues they face. Top of the agenda for Washington's partners will be getting a debriefing on U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio's talks on Tuesday with Kyiv in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, where Ukraine said it was ready to support a 30-day ceasefire deal.
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Russia’s high-flying gas exporter crippled as Europe stays away
When the CEO of Russian state gas giant Gazprom, Alexei Miller, opened a lavish Italian palazzo-styled building in central St Petersburg to house the company's export arm 11 years ago, he augured a future funded by European sales. "This is symbolic," he said, referring to the modern new offices in Russia's most European city. "Europe will increasingly need Russian gas." Instead, the opulent offices have come to symbolize Gazprom's rapid decline, dragged down by the almost total loss of European markets after the war in Ukraine ruptured Russia's ties with the West. Reeling under multi-billion-dollar losses and scrambling for savings, the company is now considering putting the palazzo up for sale along with other luxury properties it owns, according to a Gazprom executive and another source with knowledge of internal discussions at Gazprom.
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Eid al-Fitr: Employees, students in Saudi Arabia to enjoy long Eid holiday
This year’s month of fasting began on March 1. The official Eid holiday in Saudi Arabia will start on Sunday March 30, meaning that employees will enjoy a long holiday with Friday, March 28, and Saturday, March 29, already off as weekend days. The Eid al-Fitr break will be extended to four days ending on Wednesday, April 2, with work resuming on Thursday, April 3. For students on the other hand, the break will begin on March 20 and studies will resume on April 6, according to the education ministry’s academic calendar. The actual date of the first day of Eid al-Fitr will be confirmed when the crecent moon is sighted.
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Saudi Arabia’s Emergence as a Diplomatic Broker
Although Riyadh’s audition for the global spotlight began years ago, it has kicked into overdrive this year, with the kingdom hosting multiple bilateral and multilateral meetings since January alone. These include the first high-level, direct meeting between Russia and the United States in years; an emergency Arab League summit to discuss postwar reconstruction plans for Gaza; an international meeting on securing assistance for post-Assad Syria; and the first foreign trips by interim Syrian president Ahmed al-Sharaa and newly minted Lebanese president Joseph Aoun. Most recently, Riyadh hosted President Volodymyr Zelensky this week amid high-level U.S. discussions on resolving the Ukraine war, and a follow-up summit between President Trump and Vladimir Putin may take place there as well.
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Siemens Energy awarded $1.6 billion Supply Contract for Rumah 2 and Nairyah 2 Power Plants
Siemens Energy announces that it has been awarded a USD 1.6 billion project, with Harbin Electric International as the EPC contractor, to provide key technologies for the Rumah 2 and Nairyah 2 gas-fired power plants in Saudi Arabia. Located in the western and central regions, the plants will add 3.6 gigawatts of power to the national grid – enough to supply around 1.5 million homes. The project includes long-term maintenance agreements to support the plants’ operational reliability over the next 25 years. Core components for the power plants will be manufactured at the Siemens Energy Dammam Hub, which is currently expanding to increase local production capacity and support Saudi Arabia’s energy sector.
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Pokémon Go developer Niantic to sell gaming business to Saudi group
Niantic Labs has announced that it’s selling its video game division to Saudi Arabia-owned mobile developer Scopely for $3.5 billion after struggling to replicate the success of Pokémon Go across its other AR games. The newly inked agreement includes Niantic’s Pokémon Go, Monster Hunter Now, and Pikmin Bloom mobile gaming titles. The acquisition is subject to regulatory approval and other closing conditions. Should the deal go through, it will also bring Niantic’s social companion apps for Pokémon Go — Campfire and Wayfarer — under Scopely ownership. Scopely says it will gain “Niantic’s entire team of exceptional gamemakers and category-leading games.” However, the Peridot and Ingress AR gaming titles, the latter of which is also supported by the Wayfarer mapping app, will remain under the ownership and development of Niantic Spatial.
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Saudi Arabia leads Arab nations in condemning Israel’s Gaza electricity cut
Saudi Arabia led other Arab nations Qatar and Jordan in condemning Israel’s decision to cut electricity supply to the war-battered Gaza Strip, calling in separate statements for the international community to take action. Israel announced on Sunday it was disconnecting the only power line to a water desalination plant in Gaza, in an effort to pressure Palestinian militant group Hamas into releasing hostages amid an apparent impasse in truce talks. Saudi Arabia’s foreign ministry expressed “condemnation in the strongest terms of the Israeli occupation authorities’ use of collective punishment against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip by cutting off electricity to the area.”
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China, Iran and Russia hold joint naval drills in Middle East as tensions rise between Tehran and US
The joint drills, called the Maritime Security Belt 2025, took place in the Gulf of Oman near the strategic Strait of Hormuz, the narrow mouth of the Arabian Gulf through which a fifth of all crude oil traded worldwide passes. The area around the strait in the past has seen Iran seize commercial ships and launch suspected attacks in the time since President Donald Trump first unilaterally withdrew America from Tehran’s nuclear deal with world powers.
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Syria’s government signs breakthrough deal with Kurdish-led authorities in northeast
Syria’s interim government signed a deal Monday with the Kurdish-led authority that controls the country’s northeast, including a ceasefire and the merging of the main US-backed force there into the Syrian army. The deal is a major breakthrough that would bring most of Syria under the control of the government, which is led by the Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham group that led the ouster of President Bashar Assad in December. The deal was signed by interim President Ahmad Al-Sharaa and Mazloum Abdi, the commander of the US-backed, Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces. The deal to be implemented by the end of the year would bring all border crossings with Iraq and Turkiye, airports and oil fields in the northeast under the central government’s control. Prisons where about 9,000 suspected members of the Daesh group are also expected to come under government control.
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Commentary: Lamenting Ramadan cliches is the biggest cliche of all
Similarly, if you see a Ramadan ad without gentle oud music and dusk-blue lighting, without a skipping child excited by her first fast, and her smiling grandfather welcoming her to the heaped iftar table, one can ask: is this a Ramadan ad? Perhaps because the familiar imagery is comforting, ads remain the same year after year, just as family traditions remain the same. Let us, therefore, let AI run rampant. It will churn out the same familiar fare as human marketers, but without wasting sleep-starved and hungry man-hours to do so. In the meantime, the humans can work on new stuff. Don’t get too excited; this will not be revolutionary new stuff, but evolutionary.
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