Saudi-Indian Partnership for Peaceful Use of Outer Space

Saudi-Indian Partnership for Peaceful Use of Outer Space
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Saudi-Indian Partnership for Peaceful Use of Outer Space

Saudi-Indian Partnership for Peaceful Use of Outer Space

Official reports have revealed that higher directives approved assigning the Saudi Space Commission (SSC) as the authority overseeing the implementation of a space cooperation MoU signed by the King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology (KACST) and Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO).

Last month SSC Chairman Prince Sultan bin Salman held a video-conference meeting with ISRO Director Kailasavadivoo Sivan. The two discussed expanding bilateral cooperation between the Kingdom and India in the field of space.

They also reviewed the future Saudi-Indian partnership in research, science, expert training, technology, and cooperation in space exploration missions.

This revision falls within the framework of an MoU inked between the two space agencies earlier.

In other news, the SSC signed an MoU for building Saudi Arabia’s space industry capacities with the Local Content and Government Procurement Authority (LCGPA). This is part of the bold, yet achievable, goals included in the Kingdom’s national transformation plan, Vision 2030.

Both LCGPA CEO Abdulrahman Al Samari and SSC’s CEO Abdulaziz Al Al-Sheikh signed the MoU, which chiefly looks to boost inter-agency cooperation on developing local content across the value chain present in the Kingdom’s promising space sector.

The MoU also seeks to promote government procurement work at the SSC.

Moreover, the agreement falls within the scope of the partnership and integration approach among government agencies.

According to Prince Sultan, the MoU will fulfill King Salman’s directives for establishing an integrated space industry.

“The signing of the agreement follows the policy of partnership and integration between government agencies to enable the space sector to fulfill the directives of the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud on establishing an integrated industry linked to space, which has promising economic contributions,” he said.

Characterized by sustainable growth, the space sector opens doors wide in terms of research and innovation opportunities to be led by local capabilities determined on maturing this industry.

It is noteworthy that the space sector's development will scale up the Kingdom’s position regionally and globally.



Trump Goes to War with the Fed

US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, seen in April 2025, said he considered Fed independence to be a matter of law. Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP
US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, seen in April 2025, said he considered Fed independence to be a matter of law. Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP
TT
20

Trump Goes to War with the Fed

US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, seen in April 2025, said he considered Fed independence to be a matter of law. Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP
US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, seen in April 2025, said he considered Fed independence to be a matter of law. Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP

Donald Trump's simmering discontent with the US Federal Reserve boiled over this week, with the president threatening to take the unprecedented step of ousting the head of the fiercely independent central bank.

Trump has repeatedly said he wants rate cuts now to help stimulate economic growth as he rolls out his tariff plans, and has threatened to fire Fed Chair Jerome Powell if he does not comply, putting the bank and the White House on a collision course that analysts warn could destabilize US financial markets.

"If I want him out, he'll be out of there real fast, believe me," Trump said Thursday, referring to Powell, whose second four-year stint as Fed chair ends in May 2026.
Powell has said he has no plans to step down early, adding this week that he considers the bank's independence over monetary policy to be a "matter of law."

"Clearly, the fact that the Fed chairman feels that he has to address it means that they are serious," KPMG chief economist Diane Swonk told AFP, referring to the White House.

Stephanie Roth, chief economist at Wolfe Research, said she thinks "they will come into conflict," but does not think "that the Fed is going to succumb to the political pressure."

Most economists agree that the administration's tariff plans -- which include a 10 percent "baseline" rate on imports from most countries -- will put upward pressure on prices and cool economic growth, at least in the short term.

That would keep inflation well away from the Fed's long-term target of two percent, and likely prevent policymakers from cutting rates in the next few months.

"They're not going to react because Trump posted that they should be cutting," Roth said in an interview, adding that doing so would be "a recipe for a disaster" for the US economy.

- Fed independence 'absolutely critical' -
Many legal scholars say the US president does not have the power to fire the Fed chair or any of his colleagues on the bank's 19-person rate-setting committee for any reason but cause.

The Fed system, created more than a century ago, is also designed to insulate the US central bank from political interference.

"Independence is absolutely critical for the Fed," said Roth. "Countries that do not have independent central banks have currencies that are notably weaker and interest rates that are notably higher."

Moody's Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi told AFP that "we've had strong evidence that impairing central bank independence is a really bad idea."

- 'Can't control the bond market' -
One serious threat to the Fed's independence comes from an ongoing case in which the Trump administration has indicated it will seek to challenge a 1935 Supreme Court decision denying the US president the right to fire the heads of independent government agencies.

The case could have serious ramifications for the Fed, given its status as an independent agency whose leadership believes they cannot currently be fired by the president for any reason but cause.

But even if the Trump administration succeeds in court, it may soon run into the ultimate guardrail of Fed independence: The bond markets.

During the recent market turbulence unleashed by Trump's tariff plans, US government bond yields surged and the dollar fell, signaling that investors may not see the United States as the safe haven investment it once was.

Faced with the sharp rise in US Treasury yields, the Trump administration paused its plans for higher tariffs against dozens of countries, a move that helped calm the financial markets.

If investors believed the Fed's independence to tackle inflation was compromised, that would likely push up the yields on long-dated government bonds on the assumption that long-term inflation would be higher, and put pressure on the administration.

"You can't control the bond market. And that's the moral of the story," said Swonk.

"And that's why you want an independent Fed."