Saudi Crown Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz called Wednesday for stronger military cooperation between the United States and Gulf monarchies whose security he said is threatened.
Saudi Crown Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz called Wednesday for stronger military cooperation between the United States and Gulf monarchies whose security he said is threatened.
The prince made the remarks during a meeting in the Saudi city of Jeddah between visiting US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and ministers from the Gulf Cooperation Council.
"We meet today amid persistent threats to the region's security and stability," which "necessitate coordination in politics and defense strategies of our countries," said Salman.
"The security of our countries and our people are in danger," added the prince, who also holds the kingdom's defense portfolio.
Salman said among the issues of concern were "political crises" in some Arab states, as well as "attempts to acquire weapons of mass destruction and meddling of certain states" in the internal affairs of others, in an apparent reference to Iran.
He voiced hope that "cooperation continues" with the United States, stressing "historic and strategic relations" between Washington and GCC countries have "contributed to cementing security and stability in the region."
The US-GCC meeting was expected to offer Hagel a chance "to underscore US security commitments in the Middle East and to reinforce the United States' unstinting policy of preventing Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon and further destabilizing the region," Pentagon press secretary Rear Admiral John Kirby said last week.
The gathering would also focus on coordinating "air and missile defense, maritime security and cyber defense," he said.
After his stop in Saudi Arabia, Hagel is to head to Jordan for talks on the raging civil war in its neighbor Syria.