No King Replacement For Saudi Arabian Palace
Darlene Tverdohleb | | Sep 25, 2015 01:29 PM EDT |
(Photo : Youtube) On Sep. 4, the U.S. President meets the King of Saudi Arabia.
Since King Salman of Saudi Arabia's ascension to the throne after his brother Abdullah's death in January, a disastrous foreign policy (e.g., The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries policy) has been adopted throughout the Middle East; thus, a palace coup has been planned through a letter urging other members of the House of Saud to replace the current 79-year old king.
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According to RT News, the dubbed "Game of Thrones a-la-Gulf" is presently going on at the Saudi Arabian palace because of the letter that is circulating among the members of the Saudi royal family that warns the House of Saud might lose its grip on power.
The letter contains a number of accusations that an unnamed late king's grandson wrote and is signed as one of the descendants of the King Abdulaziz of the House of Saud. The letter also criticized that the king's nephew, Mohammad bin Al-Nayef is a vain and extravagant person.
The author stays anonymous for being afraid of negative repercussions that may come his way. It is said that the letter is calling for Saudi to be replace the king merely because the Deputy Crown Prince, Mohammed bin Salman, as well as the king's nephew, is responsible for making prices to fall steeply and also the war in Yemen.
Saudi's dropping of the oil price engineered the plunging of Russia into financial and economic turmoil, according to Before It's News. Because of this, the United States as well as other countries benefits on it, which undermine economic security and political stability of Russia.
Many developments have been made within the kingdom since King Salman inherited the throne. World energy relationships as well as agreements rearrange the entire global control matrix. So far, it has been good for some third world countries like the Philippines and others to benefit from the dropping of the oil price.
TagsDeputy Crown Prince, Mohammed bin Salman, King Salman, oil price, palace coup
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