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Iranian presidents Saudi Arabian visit fails to lessen
tensions
By Peter Symonds
5 March 2007
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For all of the official expressions of goodwill, the one-day
visit of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to Saudi Arabia
on Saturday has done nothing to lessen the intensifying rivalry
between the two countries.
Amid escalating US military preparations against Iran and urged
on by the Bush administration, the Saudi monarchy has in recent
months been actively intervening across the Middle East to counter
Iranian influence. Saudi Arabia has assumed a far greater role
in propping up the Lebanese government against the Iranian-aligned
Hezbollah and last month brokered a coalition deal in Mecca between
the two Palestinian factionsHamas and Fatah.
In response, Ahmadinejads visit was aimed at blunting
Washingtons diplomatic offensive to forge an anti-Iranian
alliance of moderate Sunni states, including Saudi
Arabia, Egypt and Jordan. The trip to RiyadhAhmadinejads
first since winning the presidency in 2005follows a recent
visit by Irans top security official Ali Larijani and came
as the US pushes this week for tougher UN sanctions against Iran
over its nuclear programs.
Saudi King Abdullah made a point of meeting Ahmadinejad on
his arrival at the airport and feting the Iranian president with
a banquet in his honour. According to the official Saudi Press
Agency, the two leaders declared that the greatest danger
threatening the Muslim world was the attempt to spread
strife between Sunni and Shiite Muslims and promised efforts
to stop such attempts and close ranks.
Beyond these formalities, however, nothing was resolved. No
joint statement was released and no initiatives, even cosmetic,
were announced. On his return to Tehran, Ahmadinejad declared:
We discussed the Palestinian and Iraq issues comprehensively.
We have common views in this regard. But it soon became
evident that they did not.
As Ahmadinejad was making his statements in Tehran, the Saudi
Press Agency announced that the Iranian president had voiced
support for the Arab peace initiative endorsed by the Arab summit
in Beirut in 2002. The Saudi-engineered plan, which would
normalise relations with Israel in exchange for the establishment
of a Palestinian state, has never been accepted by Tehran. Ahmadinejad
in particular has sought to posture as an intransigent defender
of the Palestinians by calling for Israel to be wiped off
the map. In response, an Iranian presidential spokesman
cautiously announced that no discussions were held in this
regard.
Nor was there agreement on other matters. Ahmadinejad told
the Iranian media that he and the king had discussed the
plots carried out by the enemies in order to divide the world
of Islam. The two leaders, he said, were fully aware
of the threats of our enemies and we condemned them. Ahmadinejad
clearly numbers the US among Irans enemies,
yet Saudi Arabia is a longtime US ally and has been strengthening
its ties. The comments were met with silence in Riyadh.
Iran and Saudi Arabia are just as far apart on Iraq. While
the Iranian regime calls for an end to the US occupation, the
Saudi monarchy has opposed any withdrawal of US troops fearing
it would leave in power a Shiite-dominated government with close
ties to Iran. King Abdullah reportedly warned US Vice President
Dick Cheney during his visit to Riyadh last November that Saudi
Arabia would actively back Sunni insurgents if the US began a
pull-out from Iraq. Within Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states,
Sunni fundamentalist clerics have openly denounced Shiite Iran
as a more dangerous enemy than either the US or Israel.
A Saudi analyst with close ties to the government rather contemptuously
commented to the New York Times: In the end, they
[Abdullah and Ahmadinejad] both know this is a geopolitical struggle.
They can offer big words about ending sectarian strife, but what
can they really do? Ahmadinejad simply undertook this visit to
make himself look more cooperative with other Persian Gulf states.
A former Iranian official told the British-based Financial
Times: Its not a war between the Shia and Sunni.
Its a hidden war between Iran and the Arab world. But the
incidents in the region are also not about regional issues. They
are about tensions between Iran and the US. Arab countries are
having to choose between the two, and they go with America.
While wanting to avoid another war in the region, the Saudi
regime has been strengthened by the growing US naval presence
in the Persian Gulf and escalating US propaganda against Tehran.
King Abdullah no doubt used the talks to intensify the pressure
on Ahmadinejad prior to a regional conference on Iraqi security
in Baghdad this Saturday.
Along with other Middle Eastern and international delegates,
US officials are due to attend, together with their Iranian counterparts,
fuelling speculation that the Bush administration is making a
shift in its longstanding refusal to hold direct negotiations.
The rather frosty meeting between King Abdullah and Ahmadinejad
in Riyadh is another indication that Washington, far from looking
to open talks with Tehran, will exploit the opportunity to ratchet
up its threats.
Commenting on Ahmadinejads visit, US State Department
spokesman Sean McCormack declared: We hope that they [the
Saudis] send a message to the Iranian president that across a
wide spectrum the Iranian behaviour in the region and around the
world is just unacceptable, whether its their support for
terrorism or their pursuit of weapons of mass destruction or their
efforts to block any sort of progress in building a democracy
in Lebanon or in the Palestinian areas.
The very fact that Ahmadinejads trip to Saudi Arabia
attracted close attention in the international media is another
symptom of the escalating tensions being produced by the Bush
administrations preparations for war against Iran. A lengthy
article by veteran journalist Seymour Hersh in last weeks
New Yorker pointed to Saudi-US collaboration in funding
anti-Hezbollah groups in Lebanon, including Sunni extremists sympathetic
to Al Qaeda, and opposition parties inside Syria, a close Iranian
ally.
The oil-rich Gulf states have also become arenas of intrigue.
A lurid story in yesterdays British-based Sunday Telegraph
declared that Iran has trained secret networks of agents
across the Gulf states to attack Western interests and incite
unrest in the event of a military strike against its nuclear program.
The details from a disenchanted former Iranian diplomat, who now
lives in exile in Europe, claimed that Dubai was a hub for
regional intelligence operations because of the large number
of Iranians working there.
These accusations will undoubtedly be added to the wide
spectrum of allegations being made by the US to justify
its confrontation with Iran. It should be noted, however, that
Iran is not alone in using Dubai as a base of operations. A US
Council on Foreign Relations publication last month revealed that
about half a dozen US State Department officials have opened
a diplomatic mission there to collect information about Iranians
in the region...
The Dubai-based embassy is the first of its kind devoted
to Iran since diplomatic relations were severed after the 1979
seizure of the US embassy in Tehran and subsequent hostage crisis.
A State Department official based in Dubai rejects the term listening
station, because it makes it sound like we have radars
hanging out our windows and station sounds like the
CIA. The purpose of the post, the official continues, is
to get a sense of whats going on in Iran. It is not some
recruiting office and is not organising the next revolution in
Iran. Still, the official says the Iranian press is very
concerned by the US presence in Dubai, which it refers to as the
regime-change office.
Notwithstanding its implausible declaration of benign intent,
the existence of a US diplomatic post in Dubai specifically targetted
against Tehran is just one more indication that the Bush administration
is rapidly intensifying a confrontation with Iran that threatens
to engulf the entire region.
See Also:
US to join Iran at international talks:
another round of threats and ultimatums
[2 March 2007]
The Bush administration's
new strategy of setting the Middle East aflame
[28 February 2007]
US war drums beat louder after
Iran fails to meet UN deadline
[26 February 2007]
US Vice President Cheney menaces
Iran with military aggression
[24 February 2007]
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