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ROUHANI STARTS HIS ARABIAN GULF TOUR

Experts say willingnes­s of GCC to talk to Iran has more to do with proving they tried rather than solving the intractabl­e

- Taimur Khan Gulf Correspond­ent foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

Iranian president to stop in Oman and Kuwait in bid to lower tension as US pressure rises,

ABU DHABI // Iranian president Hassan Rouhani visited Oman and Kuwait yesterday in an attempt to lower tensions between the regional rivals as Tehran braces itself for increased pressure from the new US administra­tion. Mr Rouhani met Sultan Qaboos in Muscat before travelling to Kuwait at the invitation of the emir, Sheikh Sabah Al Ahmad Al Sabah.

Last month, the Kuwaiti foreign minister, Sheikh Sabah Khaled Al Sabah, made a rare visit to Iran, where he delivered a conciliato­ry message from the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council.

“Gulf states truly desire that relations with Iran be normal and based on internatio­nal law,” Sheikh Sabah said during his visit, calling for ties to be restored.

The GCC had agreed to talks with Iran at the annual summit in December, which included ending interferen­ce in the affairs of Arab states and Tehran’s support for militant groups.

The Iranian president’s trip is the latest attempt to thaw relations between the GCC and Iran after the cold war between Saudi Arabia and Iran plumbed new depths last year.

Mr Rouhani stated his desire for normal ties with the GCC during his inaugurati­on in 2013, and Iran’s minister Mohammed Jawad Zarif has called for a dialogue over the past year.

But anger in the GCC over Iranian hegemony in the region and the previous US administra­tion’s intentions towards Iran after the nuclear deal gave way to a cycle of escalation.

Gulf countries cut or reduced diplomatic ties with Tehran and Iran boosted efforts against Gulf rivals, increasing support for militants in Bahrain, as well as allies among rebels fighting the Saudi- led coalition in Yemen. But US president Donald Trump has vowed to renegotiat­e the Iran nuclear deal and has appointed senior national security officials who are critical of Iran.

His administra­tion has declared that it is putting Iran “on notice” and is reportedly in talks to provide more military support to the Saudi- led coalition, which is supporting the internatio­nally- backed Yemeni government against the Iran-backed Houthi rebels. The US has also imposed more sanctions against Tehran for ballistic missile tests carried out last month and is considerin­g whether to designate Iran’s Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps as a terrorist organisati­on.

During Barack Obama’s tenure, most GCC countries felt that the US was working towards a rapprochem­ent with Iran and that it wanted to leave a balance of power in the region so it could focus on pursuing its interests in east Asia.

Seen from a Gulf perspectiv­e, promises to help improve the GCC’s security and military abilities to counter Iran’s regional activities fell short.

The Obama administra­tion refused to share informatio­n with the Arab coalition about intercepte­d Iranian arms shipments to Yemeni rebels, according to one Gulf official – an example of actions that stoked concerns.

But the return to a stated US policy of containmen­t – and a much closer alignment on Iran between the White House and Riyadh – may have reassured GCC officials enough to feel comfortabl­e trying to engage Tehran, even if it remains sceptical of what can be achieved.

“I think that there is more confidence, particular­ly from the Saudi side, to engage because they are aware that there is going to be increased pressure on Iran going forward,” said Sanam Vakil, an expert on Iran at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies.

Some observers said the willingnes­s of Gulf states to talk might have more to do with a desire to prove they tried rather than being invested in the process.

Tehran is also hoping to take advantage of the uncertaint­y around what Mr Trump’s approach to the region will be, and concerns about military conflict with Iran, an outcome that could be disastrous for the GCC.

If the two sides do engage, in the immediate term it will most likely focus on issues that could neverthele­ss serve as confidence building measures, such as finalising the return of Iranian pilgrims to the Haj.

“It is an important trip for President Rouhani,” Ms Vakil said. “Iran has a number of fronts of tension with the US, and I think from Iran’s perspectiv­e dialling down the extent of the tensions with the GCC is an advantage.”

‘ I think from Iran’s perspectiv­e dialling down the extent of the tensions with the GCC is an advantage Sanam Vakil an expert on Iran

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