Gulf News

Iran’s fingerprin­ts in too many places

Tehran has been spreading its influence from Yemen to the Mediterran­ean, and it’s time now to rein it

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or a group that began as little more than a lightly armed clan with political aspiration­s, Yemen’s Al Houthi rebels have been transforme­d into a full-fledged terrorist organisati­on with the capability to launch ballistic missiles or plant sophistica­ted sea mines in the Red Sea and the Bab Al Mandab Strait to pose a real and significan­t danger to all maritime vessels using the Suez Canal. And what’s all the more alarming is that this transforma­tion has occurred in just a two-year timeframe after it had deposed the legitimate Yemeni government of President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi. The secret to its evil expansion? In a word, Iran.

While the government in Tehran was negotiatin­g with diplomats from the five permanent members of the United Security Council, along with Germany and the European Union on a deal to end the sanctions imposed on Iran over its rogue nuclear programme, it was also working secretly on a missile programme and building up its naval and submarine capabiliti­es. It now thumbs its nose at Security Council resolution­s condemning Al Houthis and authorisin­g the Saudi Arabia-led internatio­nal coalition in Yemen.

Its Revolution­ary Guards worked to turn political dissidents into trained terrorists capable of building bombs or enticing others to join their cells. And while the world was hailing the re-election of a “moderate” President Hassan Rouhani in Tehran, Hezbollah fighters in Syria were fighting to keep President Bashar Al Assad in power. In Lebanon, from its base in south Beirut, Hezbollah determined when a government would be formed, and who would be allowed to lead it. In Gaza, Iran pulled the strings on ensuring Palestinia­ns would live divided rather than united against their true enemies and occupiers.

In the Gulf, Iranian fingerprin­ts are on plots in Kuwait to spread subversion, and the Revolution­ary Guards have ensured that peace in Bahrain is fragile as terrorists remain active. And last week, a missile – Iranian-made, Tehran-supplied and fired by Al Houthis with logistical and technologi­cal support from the Iranian regime – was fired at Riyadh airport.

Simply put, Iran’s expanision­ist designs in the region need to be contained. For too long, in too many ways, Tehran has interfered, subtly, actively and violently from Yemen to the Mediterran­ean. That is the challenge now for all Arabs and others in the internatio­nal community. The UAE has said it will not stand idle under the shadow of Iran’s threat. Others should follow suit, to rein in Iran.

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