Saudi-Iran rapprochement?
-DR. ABDUL RUFF
COLACHAL
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Alongside the US-Cold war, there is also a Saudi-Iran cold war
progressing for years now unfortunately
without any valid reason. Iran is a majority Persian country that belongs to
the Shiite branch of Islam. The vast majority of Saudis are Sunni Arabs, with a
Shiite Arab minority
Growing tension between Iran and Saudi Arabia has popularized talk
of a new cold war in the Middle East. While the most influential regional
powers in the Persian Gulf take care not to get embroiled in a direct conflict,
they try to outflank each other by seeking allies among regional political
forces, and through intense propaganda. At its core, the Iranian-Saudi rivalry
is about power and money: two oil-rich giants, vying for control of the Strait
of Hormuz, a narrow water passage that accounts for almost 20% of all oil
traded worldwide (and 40% of all US crude imports pass).
Iran and Saudi Arabia are involved in a series of seemingly
intractable disputes which have the potential to destabilize the entire region
Relations between Saudi Arabia and Iran have never been smooth but
further strained by the Syrian conflict and the fallout from unrest in Bahrain.
Saudi Arabia claims leadership not of entire Islamic community but
only Sunni Muslims while Iran is considered to represent the global Shiia
Islam.
The needless confrontation between Saudi led Sunni nations and
Iran led Shiite world has been fully exploited by the enemies of Islam with
ulterior motives. .
NATO rogue states led by USA-UK terror twins launched the
anti-Islamic terror war by using the Sept 11 hoax in 2001 on the strength of
the great Sunni-Shiite divide.
Notwithstanding the massacre of millions of Muslims globally by
the NATO military forces since Sept-11, Saudi and Iran continue to be the
regional rivals pursue polices targeting each other,
Three years of enmity between these brotherly countries even
friendly ties impossible over the war in Syria, in which Iran has backed the
Damascus government and Saudi Arabia has supported the rebels. The regime of
Bashar al-Assad is Iran’s key Arab ally, and a conduit for weapons that flow
from Iran to Hezbollah via Damascus. To further isolate Iran, Saudi Arabia has
extended diplomatic and financial support to Syria’s opposition, and has called
for the arming of the rebel Free Syrian Army.
Shiite Muslim Iran and Sunni Saudi Arabia have also been at odds
over Bahrain, where the Sunni ruling family received Saudi military support in
its suppression of Arab Spring-inspired protests among its Shiite-majority
population in 2011.
.
Recently, Saudi kingdom has invited Iran to Islamic bloc foreign
ministers in Jeddah next month and Iran welcomed Saudi invitation to Islamic
bloc meeting as a friendly gesture. The two-day meeting of foreign ministers of
the Organization of Islamic Cooperation opens in Jeddah on June 18.
Consequently, reports suggest, an exchange of visits by Saudi Foreign Minister
Prince Saud al-Faisal and his Iranian counterpart Mohammad Javad Zarif was high
on Tehran's agenda. Earlier this month, Prince Saud said Zarif had been invited
to visit the kingdom in a bid to negotiate better bilateral relations. “We will
talk with them in the hope that if there are any differences, they will be
settled to the satisfaction of both countries,” he had told reporters in Riyadh
on May 13.
Saudi Arabia and its neighbors have been deeply suspicious of Iran's nuclear
ambitions and wary of the talks under way between the major powers and Tehran
aimed at striking a long-term compromise. Iranian bluster is primarily aimed at
Israel, but Saudis believe that nuclear capability would give Iran a crucial
strategic edge in the Persian Gulf. Saudi royals have privately egged on the US
for military action against. Saudis have long accused Iran of fueling
discontent among Shiite communities in Saudi Arabia and Bahrain, who are demanding equal political and cultural rights. Recently Saudi Arabia, among other Arab
nations, concluded agreements with western powers for nuclear facility, among
other important military infrastructural additions.
In a positive gesture towards Saudi Arabia, Iranian President Hassan Rowhani
said after his election last June that he wanted to reach out to Gulf Arab
governments as part of efforts to end his country's international isolation.
Beginning with Riyadh’s refusal to take its seat on the UN
Security Council Saudi Arabia over Syria issue has showcased a shift in its
foreign policy and its denouncing of President Obama for his failure to take
strong military action against Syria after chemical weapons killed hundreds of
people in a Damascus suburb last August is definitely an assertive part of its
new policy. Further, when Obama tacked on to his tour of Europe in March a stop
in Riyadh for a meeting with King Abdullah, Obama was greeted by lower-level
officials and didn’t even get courtesy dinner.
Pentagon did not retaliate in equal measure but approached the
issue differently. The Obama regime announced the transfer of ten Apache
helicopters to Egypt despite the military-backed Saudi supported military
regime’s deplorable human rights performance. U.S. gestures that may be meant
to appease Saudi Arabia and put it in a more cooperative frame of mind include
permitting the first-time delivery of advanced anti-tank, anti-armor TOW
missiles (probably from Saudi Arabia’s own stocks, I am told) to
allegedly carefully CIA-vetted “moderate” Syrian rebels. Further, Pentagon
chief Chuck Hagel is in Jeddah for the first meeting of the Gulf Cooperation
Council’s (GCC) “joint defense council” where he is no doubt assuring
his hosts that Washington is not about to sell them out and will continue
plying them with lots of very expensive and sophisticated weapons systems, as
well as guarding their borders and sea lanes with US firepower for the
indefinite future.
It would be profoundly in the interest of citizens throughout the
region if Sunnis and Shias weren’t intent on killing each oth differently. issuer. There can be an equilibrium developing between
Sunni, or predominantly Sunni, Gulf states and Iran in which there’s competition,
perhaps suspicion, but not an active or proxy warfare that is exploited by the
enemies of Islam. .
The long-awaited invitation by Saudi Foreign Minister Saud
Al-Faisal to his Iranian counterpart Mohammad Javad Zarif is all set to boost
the bilateral relations though strong confidence building measures to remove
all mutual suspicions over all issues.
The kingdom is on job of finding the succession of King Abdullah and its
coincidence with the invitation to Zarif only suggests that Saudi Arabia may be
reconsidering its regional strategy.
The Saudi kingdom’s decision to return their ambassador to
Beirut offers another signal that they are interested in preventing
the conflict next door from further destabilizing Lebanon, and perhaps a
broader willingness to reduce Sunni-Shia tensions across the region. The
Saudi-Iranian relationship is, of course, critical to any prospect of
stabilizing the region, particularly the Levant, as Riyadh and Tehran have been
the principal external supporters of the main protagonists in Syria’s
catastrophic civil war.
The kingdom might be softening its tough approach to Iran,
especially after its unprecedented April 29 parade display of Chinese-supplied
missiles capable of hitting Tehran — a gesture that followed the largest military
exercise in Saudi history, involving 130,000 men.” Riyadh perhaps wants to go
into negotiations after a show of strength.
Clearly, there is an Iranian-Saudi rapprochement on the horizon.
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