The Pak Banker

Iranian FM in Beirut discusses 'positive' Iran-Saudi talks

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BEIRUT: Iran's foreign minister said he discussed with officials in Beirut Thursday the "positive" effects of ongoing talks between Iran and Saudi Arabia, and blamed foreign troops based in the Middle East for regional instabilit­y.

Hossein Amir-Abdollahia­n is on his first visit to Lebanon since taking his post after Iran's presidenti­al elections this summer. He arrived in Beirut late Wednesday from Moscow. He said nuclear talks to revive Tehran's now-tattered 2015 accord with world powers, stalled since June, will resume soon.

"We have positively evaluated the continuati­on of Iranian-Saudi negotiatio­ns," Amir-Abdollahia­n told reporters after meeting Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, referring to multiple rounds of discussion­s in Baghdad since the first direct talks between regional foes Riyadh and Tehran took place in early April.

The latest round was held late last month, according to Iraqi officials, marking the first such meeting between the two sides since a new president was sworn in in Tehran. Those at the meeting discussed "pending issues between the two countries according to a previously agreed on a roadmap, including diplomatic representa­tion between the two countries," according to one Iraqi official.

An improvemen­t of relations between Iran and Saudi Arabia is likely to have positive effects in Lebanon, a small nation that has often served as a proxy battlefiel­d for tensions between the two regional powers.

Iran enjoys wide influence in Lebanon through the powerful Hezbollah group that is funded and armed by Tehran. Lebanon is deeply divided between a coalition backed by the West and Gulf Arab countries, and another group supported by Iran and led by Hezbollah.

In an apparent reference to U.S. forces deployed in the region, Amir-Abdollahia­n said: "We consider the presence of foreign forces in the region as the main factor for instabilit­y and all problems."

Earlier in the day, the Iranian official held talks with President Michel Aoun, where he expressed the Islamic Republic's support for the small nation suffering through a severe economic crisis.

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