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Thursday, May 16, 2024

The Economist reports on the Zionist regime laying the groundwork for the normalization of relations with Saudi Arabia

The Economist reports on the first high-speed internet line between the Zionist regime and Saudi Arabia; An issue that even the Western media has interpreted as a prelude to the normalization of Riyadh-Tel Aviv relations.

The Pak Sahafat News agency quoted the Economist as claiming that the move is a step towards breaking the monopoly of Internet services in the region, before all Internet lines between Europe and Asia crossed the Suez Canal, bypassing the long route to Africa.

Despite all this, the British economist media has also revealed that the Zionist regime considers this move as a prelude to the normalization of relations with Riyadh.

While more than 90 percent of Internet data between the two continents is currently being transmitted through Egypt, according to Egyptian officials, Egypt appears to be eliminated in Google’s new Internet project.

According to local reports, Google’s new project for Internet lines includes the installation of two offshore cables from France to India, which will improve Internet speed as well as reduce the cost of data transmission between Europe and Asia, the project, which Google is implementing with Italy Telecom until 2024, also “helps to form a new alliance group between the Zionist regime and the countries of the Persian Gulf.”

According to these reports, Tel Aviv evaluates this project – known as the Blue Raman project – as more than just a data transfer project, because the Zionist occupiers hope that this measure will be effective in melting the ice of diplomacy in the region of origin.

The report quotes an unnamed Zionist official as saying: For more than seven decades, trade routes and communication networks in the region have been designed and implemented without the participation and presence of the Israeli regime, and this is the first time since the formation of the Zionist regime, this regime is part of the region’s infrastructure projects.

In the project, high-speed internet lines are made up of two separate cables, one to the Jordanian port of Aqaba and the other to the city of Eilat in the occupied territories.

Unlike the UAE and Bahrain, which were the first countries to normalize relations with Israel, Riyadh does not have open diplomatic relations with Israel.

Read more: One Saudi roof and two airspace in compromise with the Israeli regime-2; Reasons for Riyadh’s delay in normalizing relations”: https://www.paksahafat.com/en/?p=17561

According to the Economist, the Saudis, who want to have the internet cable in the so-called smart city of Nium, have remained silent and have not yet made a public statement.

The report also adds that Israeli Minister of Communications Joaz Handel considers the new Internet network in the Middle East to be a 21st century version of the Silk Road, which he claims could lead countries that have been enemies to each other until recently.  On the other hand, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman recently stated in an interview with the American magazine “De Atlantic” – published by the Saudi news agency WAS on Thursday – that his country did not see the Zionist regime as “an enemy” but as a “partner”.

In an unprecedented move, Saudi Arabia also allowed Bahraini and UAE passenger planes to cross the Riyadh skies over the occupied territories.

In an unprecedented move, Saudi Arabia also allowed Bahraini and UAE passenger planes to cross the Riyadh skies over the occupied territories.

Due to the fear of negative reactions from domestic circles and the confrontation of the people of this country with the royal family, Riyadh is particularly sensitive to the publication of any news of normalization or the establishment of close relations with the Zionist regime.

In recent years, Saudi Arabia has made efforts to reach out to Jewish figures, and the state media, backed by Saudi officials, has covered issues such as relations with the Zionist regime and the history of Judaism.

Saudi officials say the content of textbooks addressing followers of other religions with controversial titles and phrases will be reviewed as part of Mohammed bin Salman’s plan to counter extremism.

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