Bangkok Post

Rivals Iran and Saudi Arabia hold talks in Baghdad

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Middle Eastern rivals Saudi Arabia and Iran have been holding talks in Baghdad in recent weeks, an Iraqi government official and a Western diplomat told AFP.

The official-level meetings aim to restore relations severed five years ago between the Sunni Muslim kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the Shia Islamic republic of Iran.

The initiative comes at a time of shifting power dynamics, as US President Joe Biden is seeking to revive the tattered 2015 nuclear deal that was abandoned by Donald Trump.

Riyadh has officially denied the talks in its state media while Tehran has stayed mum, asserting only that it has “always welcomed” dialogue with Saudi Arabia.

The two countries cut ties in 2016 after Iranian protesters attacked Saudi diplomatic missions following the kingdom’s execution of a revered Shia cleric, Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr.

The Baghdad talks, which was facilitate­d by Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhemi, remained asecret until the Financial Times reported on Sunday that a first meeting had been held on April 9.

An Iraqi government official confirmed the talks to AFP, while a Western diplomat said he had been “briefed in advance” about the effort to “broker a better relationsh­ip ... and decrease tensions”.

The Saudi Arabian delegation is led by its intelligen­ce chief Khalid bin Ali al-Humaidan and the Iranian side by representa­tives of the secretary of the Supreme National Security Council, Ali Shamkhani, according to Adel Bakawan of the iReMMO institute for Mideast studies.

Saudi Arabia and Iran have backed opposite sides of several regional conflicts, from Syria to Yemen, where a Saudi-led coalition is fighting the Houthi rebels.

Iran supports the Houthis, who have launched several rocket and drone attacks against Saudi targets.

The Baghdad talks come during negotiatio­ns in Vienna that aim to return the United States to the 2015

nuclear accord and persuade Iran to implement nuclear commitment­s it suspended in response to US sanctions.

The effort also comes as relations between Washington and Riyadh have cooled from the very close ties of the Trump era, as Mr Biden seeks to press the oil-rich kingdom over human rights concerns.

Iraq, wedged between Iran to the east and Saudi Arabia to the south, is meanwhile trying to serve as a mediator, to

avoid becoming a battlegrou­nd for regional powers.

The war-battered country hosts about 2,500 US troops, and Mr Kadhemi’s government has come under intense pressure from Iran-backed paramilita­ry groups to send them home.

Pro-Iranian groups have accused the prime minister of being a US lackey and have launched multiple rocket attacks against Western troops and diplomats based in the country.

It was in Iraq that the Trump administra­tion ramped up tensions with Iran when a US drone strike in Baghdad early last year killed revered Iranian General Qassem Soleimani.

While Iraq then was led by prime Minister Adel Abdel Mahdi, who had brought pro-Iranian factions into the heart of the state, Mr Kadhemi is seen as closer to the US and to Saudi Arabia.

He is a personal friend of the Saudi de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, under whom the kingdom has pledged some US$3 billion (93.8 billion baht) in investment in Iraq, which lacks adequate roads, power and water plants, schools and hospitals.

Before Saudi Arabia and Iran can put aside their difference­s, they will have to resolve a series of tricky issues, said Mr Bakawan.

For Saudi Arabia, he said, the top priorities are the Iran nuclear issue and “the ‘militia-isation’ of the Middle East, particular­ly in Lebanon and Syria” where Iran has supported armed groups.

For Tehran, added Mr Bakawan, major issues include the fate of Shia living inside Saudi Arabia and accusation­s of “financing by Riyadh of radical violence in countries where there is an Iranian presence”.

The sensitivit­y of the issues means both sides are likely to maintain silence on the Baghdad talks for now.

But, behind the scenes in Iraq, Iranians and Saudis are still there, said the analyst.

“At this very moment, small groups from both delegation­s are negotiatin­g the technical details of all the issues, under the sponsorshi­p of Kadhemi,” he said.

 ?? AFP ?? Syrians stand next to a mural depicting Iran as an octopus dropping bombs and the Saudi-Qatari normalisat­ion agreement, in Idlib province on March 11.
AFP Syrians stand next to a mural depicting Iran as an octopus dropping bombs and the Saudi-Qatari normalisat­ion agreement, in Idlib province on March 11.

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