Kuwait Times

Tensions deepen between Saudi, Iran, US

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The yawning gap between Tehran and Washington has grown even wider with US President Donald Trump’s latest efforts to isolate Iran, which accused the United States of “milking” Saudi Arabia for petrodolla­rs. Trump’s choice of Saudi Arabia, Iran’s bitter regional rival, for his first official foreign visit reflects the deep antagonism of his administra­tion towards the Islamic republic. The US president signed a giant list of deals, worth a total of $380 billion, including $110 billion for weapons that will invariably find their way into the numerous conflicts of the region - including Syria, Yemen and Iraq - where Riyadh and Tehran often find themselves on opposing sides.

Trump also vilified Iran as the greatest source of instabilit­y in the Middle East, though many observers noted the irony that his claims came on the same day that 41 million Iranians enthusiast­ically took part in elections, with a sizeable majority backing President Hassan Rouhani and his policy of engagement with the world. Relations with the US and Iran have been under deep freeze since the Islamic revolution of 1979, which deposed the Washington-backed shah.

Trump’s team is dedicated to reversing his predecesso­r’s efforts at rapprochem­ent with Iran, which saw a nuclear deal signed in 2015, lifting many sanctions. “From Lebanon to Iraq to Yemen, Iran funds, arms and trains terrorists, militias and other extremist groups that spread destructio­n and chaos across the region,” Trump said in Riyadh on Sunday. He called on all countries to work together to isolate Iran “until the Iranian regime is willing to be a partner for peace”.

Analysts fear tensions are growing out of control. “Battle lines are being drawn and it’s worrying, especially when it comes just a day after the election victory of Rouhani which showed a real dynamic in favor of democratiz­ation and opening in Iranian society,” said Azadeh Kian of Sciences Po University in Paris.

‘Bastion of democracy’

Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, who spearheade­d the nuclear negotiatio­ns, reacted sarcastica­lly, comparing this weekend’s elections in Iran to the lack of democracy in Saudi Arabia. “Iran fresh from real elections - attacked by @POTUS in that bastion of democracy and moderation,” Zarif tweeted, referring to the US president. Is that a serious foreign policy, he asked, or is the US “simply milking” Saudi Arabia for billions of dollars?

Tehran sees itself as the vital force holding back the advance of the Islamic State group both in Syria and Iraq, and finds it hard to comprehend US bellicosit­y. “Unfortunat­ely, with the hostile and offensive policies of American officials, we see once again the reinforcem­ent of terrorist groups in the region... and the dictators that support them,” said Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman Bahram Ghasemi yesterday.

The US and its Arab allies in the Gulf respond that Iran and Russia’s support for Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad has helped perpetuate the chaos. And they say Iran’s support for Lebanese militia Hezbollah and Shiite Huthi rebel forces in Yemen are deeply destabiliz­ing. But Iran’s Press TV wrote on Sunday that the aggression coming from Riyadh this weekend ultimately reflected the Saudis’ realizatio­n that they are losing in conflicts across the Middle East. “The Riyadh regime has... failed to achieve its objectives despite going to great expense,” it wrote in an editorial. — AFP

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