Gulf News

Al Houthis are weak, says Mohammad

‘IRAN-BACKED MILITANTS IN YEMEN BECOMING INCREASING­LY ISOLATED POLITICALL­Y’

- BY BEN HUBBARD

If they have a nuclear weapon, it’s a shield for them to let them do whatever they want in the Middle East, to make sure that no one attacks them or they will use their nuclear weapons.”

Mohammad Bin Salman | Saudi Crown Prince

Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman of Saudi Arabia has said that the Iranianali­gned militia that took over the Yemeni capital, Sana’a, in 2014, were increasing­ly isolated politicall­y.

During his first meeting with editors and reporters from The New York Times on Monday, Prince Mohammad, 32, the heir to the Saudi throne, dismissed the seven missiles Al Houthis fired at Saudi Arabia from Yemen on Sunday as “a last-ditch effort” that only showed they were weak.

Saudi Arabia, he said, is now seeking to end the war through a political process, trying to divide Al Houthis and maintainin­g military pressure on them.

The crown prince also spoke about his efforts to change Saudi Arabia’s religious rhetoric to ensure greater openness toward other faiths.

“I believe Islam is hijacked,” Prince Mohammad said, criticisin­g the way he said that groups like the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and terrorist organisati­ons like Daesh and Al Qaida had distorted the religion.

“Delaying it and watching them getting that bomb, that means you are waiting for the bullet to reach your head,”

“So you have to move from today.”

Prince Mohammad, on a cross-country charm offensive in the US, is visiting Washington, New York, Silicon Valley, Houston and other areas.

His trip is aimed at reinforcin­g ties between Saudi Arabia and the US and drumming up American investment in the kingdom.

He discussed his plans for economic and social changes in Saudi Arabia, his views on the kingdom’s conflicts with Iran and Qatar and the war in Yemen.

The meeting was off the record, but Saudi officials allowed some of the crown prince’s comments to be published.

Mohammad also renewed his attack on the Iran nuclear deal, saying the agreement would delay but not prevent Tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons.

“Delaying it and watching them getting that bomb, that means you are waiting for the bullet to reach your head,”He reserved his most forceful comments for Iran with which his country is locked in a regional struggle for power and influence that plays out across conflicts in Yemen and Syria, among others.

Acting freely

The US and other world powers reached a 2015 agreement with Iran to curb its nuclear programme in exchange for lifting sanctions on the country.

However, some American officials, including President Donald Trump, have criticised the agreement and threatened to repeal it.

Mohammad accused Iran of seeking to acquire nuclear weapons so that it could act freely in the Middle East without fear of retributio­n.

“If Iran has a nuclear weapon, it’s a shield for them to let them do whatever they want in the Middle East, to make sure that no one attacks them or they will use their nuclear weapons.”

He said that the current nuclear agreement should be replaced with one that would ensure that Iran never obtained a nuclear weapon while also addressing Iran’s other activities in the Middle East.

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