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War 3 The Plan Documentary Obama Israel Syria Iran Russia USA China – Video


War 3 The Plan Documentary Obama Israel Syria Iran Russia USA China
Years ago he made such predictions as that of Islamic terror cells rising up out of American soil, and described how they would strike at the U.S. economy, t...

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War 3 The Plan Documentary Obama Israel Syria Iran Russia USA China - Video

Obama WINS 3rd TERM WW3 coming – Video


Obama WINS 3rd TERM WW3 coming
A political analyst says the Islamic Republic of Iran has had a much stronger position in support of the Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar compared to that of near...

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WILL SYRIA COLLAPSE VIA OBAMA’S FALSE FLAG WAR? (Alex Jones) – WW3 – Video


WILL SYRIA COLLAPSE VIA OBAMA #39;S FALSE FLAG WAR? (Alex Jones) - WW3
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WILL SYRIA COLLAPSE VIA OBAMA'S FALSE FLAG WAR? (Alex Jones) - WW3 - Video

Obama meets with Saudi king to reassure key ally- Amnesty International says human rights 'missing in action' on Obama …

President Obama paid a visit Friday to the desert oasis of wary ally King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, hoping to reassure the aging monarch who is nervously watching Washington's negotiations with Iran and other U.S. policy in the Middle East.

Obama's Marine One helicopter kicked up clouds of sand in his arrival at the king's desert camp outside the capital of Riyadh for a meeting and dinner with Abdullah. The president walked through a row of military guards to an ornate room featuring a massive crystal chandelier and took a seat next to the 89-year-old king, who was breathing with the help of an oxygen tank.

Secretary of State John Kerry sat at Obama's side for the visit that is the president's third official meeting with the king in six years.

Despite its decades-long alliance with the United States, Saudi's royal family has become increasingly anxious in recent years over Obama's nuclear talks with Iran and his tepid involvement in the Syrian civil war. During his evening meetings with the king, Obama's task was to reassure Saudi Arabia that the U.S. is not abandoning Arab interests despite troop withdrawals from Iraq and Afghanistan, greater energy independence back home and nuclear talks with predominantly Persian Iran.

White House officials and Mideast experts say the Saudi royal family's main concern is Iran. They fear Iran's nuclear program, object to Iran's backing of the Bashar Assad regime in Syria and see the government of Tehran as having designs on oil fields in Saudi Arabia and Bahrain.

Deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes told reporters aboard Air Force One on the flight to Saudi Arabia that the issues at the heart of Obama's meetings with Abdullah include Gulf security, Middle East peace, Syria, Iran and Egypt.

On Syria, Rhodes said Obama did not plan to make any specific announcements about additional assistance to opposition forces. He said the U.S. and Saudi Arabia have been working together closely to coordinate their assistance to the rebels.

Rhodes said that coordination has helped put the U.S. relationship with Saudi Arabia "in a stronger place today than it was in the fall when we had some tactical differences about our Syria policy."

"We are in a better place today than we were seven months ago," Rhodes said.

Obama angered Saudi officials by scrapping plans to launch a military strike against Syria, choosing instead to back a plan to strip Syrian President Bashar Assad of his chemical weapons.

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Obama meets with Saudi king to reassure key ally- Amnesty International says human rights 'missing in action' on Obama ...

Obama Offers Europe, Mideast Allies Assurances

From the heart of Europe to the expanse of Saudi Arabia's desert, President Barack Obama's weeklong overseas trip amounted to a reassurance tour for stalwart, but sometimes skeptical, American allies.

At a time when Obama is grappling with crises and conflict in both Europe and the Middle East, the four-country swing also served as a reminder that even those longtime partners still need some personal attention from the president.

Europe is a crucial linchpin in Obama's efforts to rally the international community in opposition to Russia's incursion in Ukraine, but the continent's leaders have concerns about the impact tougher Western sanctions on Moscow could have on their own economy. Saudi Arabia has a hand in nearly every Middle East crisis consuming White House attention, including the Syrian civil war, nuclear negotiations with Iran and peace talks between the Israelis and Palestinians, but has grown anxious about Obama's positioning in the region.

Obama departed for Washington Saturday with much left unresolved on each of those matters. Still, officials said the president had made progress during his pilgrimage to Saudi King Abdullah's desert oasis, as well as in his hours of conversations with European leaders. The president's advisers were particularly bullish about his meeting in the Netherlands with allies from the Group of Seven leading industrial nations, which agreed to indefinitely suspend Russia from the larger Group of Eight.

"There's been a lot of movement in the last several days that suggest that Europe has been stirred to action by the events in Ukraine, and I think the president felt a degree of unity in that G7 meeting, in the EU session at NATO, and then with the individual leaders that he met with," said Ben Rhodes, Obama's deputy national security adviser.

Obama's stops in the Netherlands and Belgium were scheduled long before Russia's provocations in Ukraine but ended up being a well-timed opportunity for the president to discuss the crisis personally with Europe's leaders. As Obama sought pledges that Europe would cooperate if tougher economic sanctions on Russia become necessary, he also recommitted American support for NATO, the trans-Atlantic military alliance.

Those personal assurances from the president were welcomed by a continent that has developed something of an inferiority complex while watching Obama curry favor with Asia and get consumed by Mideast crises. Though Obama remains popular with the European public, he has also irked some leaders with what they've seen as slights to the European Union, the often unwieldy 28-nation bloc.

A particular sticking point for Europe was the fact that Obama had never visited Brussels, the headquarters city of both the EU and NATO. Obama finally checked that box on this latest trip, using his stop in the Belgian city to deliver a speech urging Europe to take a leadership role in protecting Ukraine's sovereignty against Russian provocations.

"The policies of your government, the principles of your European Union, will make a critical difference in whether or not the international order that so many generations before you have strived to create continues to move forward, or whether it retreats," he said, standing before a crowd of young people at the Palais des Beaux-Arts museum.

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Obama Offers Europe, Mideast Allies Assurances