Spain’s King Felipe VI met yesterday with Saudi King Salman, official media said, during a visit coinciding with talks to sell Spanish warships.
Felipe, 48, was guest of honour at a lunch hosted by Salman, 81, who decorated him with the cordon of King Abdul Aziz, the highest Saudi honour for a foreigner, the Saudi Press Agency said.
Later they discussed relations between the two nations and how to further develop them “in various fields”, it said. They also reviewed the situation in the Middle East, before Felipe held separate talks with Saudi Finance Minister Mohamed Aljadaan and Minister of Commerce and Investment Majed al-Qasabi.
The Spanish king arrived late Saturday in Riyadh for a three-day stay.
Madrid’s foreign ministry said its minister Alfonso Dastis, and Public Works Minister Inigo de la Serna, would accompany Felipe during the visit. Spanish media have linked this trip to a much-anticipated deal to sell Avante 2200 frigates for an estimated two billion euros ($2.1bn).
“We can only confirm that negotiations are very advanced to build five warships which would be sold to the Saudi navy,” a spokesman for state-owned Spanish ship builder Navantia said.
Spain is the seventh largest arms exporter in the world, and Saudi Arabia is one of the biggest buyers of military gear. A coalition began air strikes over Yemen almost two years ago after Houthi rebels and their allies, troops loyal to ex-president Ali Abdullah Saleh, overran much of Yemen. This year’s budget allocates 191bn riyals ($51bn) for military spending including equipment and weaponry, down from 205bn riyals spent in 2016.
A separate budget allocation of 97bn riyals is to pay for new naval bases for the Border Guards, and other security projects. Felipe’s father, Juan Carlos, who reigned from 1975 to 2014, has close ties to the Saudi royal family.
A Spanish consortium, Al-Shoula, is building a high-speed railway across the desert to link the holy cities of Makkah and Madinah. The project is behind schedule and is now set to open in 2018.
Spanish construction group FCC leads one of three consortia building a $22.5bn rapid transit system in the Saudi capital.