Bangkok Post

Jordan hosts Arab summit amid tension

-

AMMAN: Jordan was set to host a Middle East summit yesterday bringing together regional and internatio­nal players hoping to help resolve regional crises, particular­ly in neighbouri­ng Iraq.

The “Baghdad II” meeting, which included officials from France and the European Union, follows an August 2021 summit in Iraq’s capital organised at the initiative of French President Emmanuel Macron, who met with Jordan’s King Abdullah II yesterday.

Iraq only recently arrived at a fragile compromise government after a year of political stalemate.

The summit, held on the shores of the Dead Sea, was aimed to “provide support for the stability, security and prosperity of Iraq,” the French presidency said in a statement, adding it hopes this will benefit “the entire region”.

The meeting took place as several countries in the region are mired in unrest. For over three months, Iran has bloodily suppressed a wave of popular demonstrat­ions sparked by the Sept 16 death in custody of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian of Kurdish origin.

The meeting was also attended by the EU’s top diplomat, Josep Borrell, who has been mediating talks aimed at reviving Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers.

Syria continues to be a battlegrou­nd for competing geopolitic­al interests and Lebanon remains in an economic and political quagmire.

Baghdad II saw Jordan host Iraq’s new Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, Iran’s foreign minister and delegation­s from Turkey and Saudi Arabia.

Jordan, which has seen strikes and protests against rising fuel prices in recent days, had said the army will deploy on the road from Amman airport to the Dead Sea conference centre, about 50 kilometres west of the capital.

“This summit has great ambitions but no one expects miracles,” says Riad Kahwaji, director of the Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahia­n is expected to be busy on the side lines of the conference.

France’s role as a mediator is crucial, Mr Kahwaji said, with Paris “keeping the thread of dialogue on behalf of Westerners with Iran, especially as the Vienna nuclear negotiatio­ns are currently in stalemate”.

The Dubai-based analyst said it is necessary to gauge the “dispositio­n of Tehran — which plays a central role in the crises of the region from Iraq to Syria through to Lebanon and Yemen — to compromise”.

Iran’s involvemen­t in the Ukrainian conflict through the supply of drones to Russia further complicate­s the discussion­s, Mr Kahwaji said.

Tehran has accused regional rival Saudi Arabia — with which it has had no diplomatic relations since 2016 — of fomenting unrest in Iran as protests rage on.

The conference will also be a test for Iraq’s Sudani, appointed prime minister in late October after more than a year of deadlock. Considered closer to Iran than his predecesso­r this will be his first major internatio­nal meeting.

 ?? ?? Abdullah: Meets France’s Macron
Abdullah: Meets France’s Macron

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand