The two-day summit, the first since the region-wide protests unseated three veteran Arab leaders in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya, will also look at possible ways to solve crises in a number of neighboring states in the region.
“The agenda of the GCC summit includes a whole range of new regional developments,” said Saad A. Alammar, assistant secretary-general for political affairs, on Wednesday.
Alammar pointed out that a meeting of GCC foreign ministers took place last week to review preparations for the summit. “This meeting will be the 32nd GCC Supreme Council Summit,” said Alammar, adding that the role of the council in ensuring security in the region will be one of the important topics on the agenda.
A number of important issues in the fields of politics, military cooperation, security affairs, economics, media and the environment will also be discussed by the Gulf heads of state, he added.
The Council of Ministers chaired by Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah on Monday emphasized the GCC's leading role in preserving the security and stability of the region over the past three decades, while calling for “greater GCC coordination to counter “dangerous developments.”
Another GCC official said the Gulf leaders might also spell out an action plan to deter Tehran and stop its alleged interference in the affairs of GCC states.
Questions surrounding Iran's nuclear program have been a potential cause of concern, said the official. The meeting has also added significance given the fact that Yemen was still caught in crossfire despite Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh signing a GCC-brokered deal to step down.
He said GCC Secretary-General Abdullatif Al-Zayani was currently on a regional tour to brief Gulf states and their leaders about preparations for the summit.
On Monday, Al-Zayani was received by UAE President Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al-Nahyan. Al-Zayani briefed the president on the efforts taken by member states for enhancing joint GCC work as well as a number of other topics of common concern.
A plan to build a joint defense system and a proposal to work out full integration of the six Gulf states’ armed forces as a prelude to the implementation of a comprehensive plan to defend the Gulf countries' integrity and sovereignty will be discussed by the leaders.
The summit meeting may also discuss the deployment of Peninsula Shield forces in Bahrain, while reaffirming support and solidarity for Manama on all fronts.
GCC summit slated in Riyadh on Dec. 19
Publication Date:
Thu, 2011-12-01 02:22
old inpro:
Taxonomy upgrade extras:
© 2024 SAUDI RESEARCH & PUBLISHING COMPANY, All Rights Reserved And subject to Terms of Use Agreement.