The National - News

‘IRAN MUST COME BACK TO TABLE’

▶ Anwar Gargash says Tehran has to pursue diplomacy and end its regional interferen­ce to bring stability to the Gulf

- MINA ALDROUBI

Iran should come to the table to talk about a new deal that tackles its nuclear programme, ballistic missiles and regional interferen­ce, Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Dr Anwar Gargash said yesterday.

Tension remains high over Tehran’s collapsing nuclear deal with world powers, from which the US withdrew more than a year ago.

The September attacks on two Saudi Aramco oil facilities, which Riyadh and Washington believe were launched by Iran, have only made the situation worse.

“For such a process to work, it is essential that the internatio­nal community is on the same page, especially the US and the EU, as well as the Arab Gulf states,” Dr Gargash said during the annual Abu Dhabi Strategic Debate. It is vital to include Arab Gulf states in these negotiatio­ns, he said.

Dr Gargash said diplomacy is needed now more than ever to

“create a new, more stable regional order in which all countries will be able to thrive”.

When it comes to the nuclear deal, the internatio­nal community “should not fall for the false choice between war on the one hand or a flawed [deal] on the other”, he said.

Instead, what is needed is a renewed, robust and realistic diplomatic effort to reach a more sustainabl­e agreement.

“Further escalation at this point serves no one and we strongly believe that there is room for collective diplomacy to succeed,” he said.

Since pulling out of the nuclear deal, the US has imposed several sanctions as part of its “maximum pressure” campaign against Tehran.

Dr Gargash said talks with Iran must not only deal with the nuclear issue but also its ballistic missile programme and regional interferen­ce through proxy groups.

“I believe there could be a path to a deal with Iran that all parties might soon be ready to embark on. It will be long, and patience and courage will be required,” he said.

Addressing the situation in Yemen, Dr Gargash said last week’s signing of the Riyadh Agreement on a power-sharing deal between the government of Yemen and the Southern Transition­al Council left him with a “real sense of optimism”.

“The agreement solidifies the anti-Houthi coalition and provides a more robust basis for reaching a political solution.

Now we need to build on the momentum this has given us,” he said.

Dr Gargash believes the deal brings Yemen’s warring factions a step closer to engaging in a peace process that stalled after the signing of the Stockholm Agreement between the Houthis and the government in December last year.

The deal included a ceasefire in the port city of Hodeidah, the opening of a humanitari­an

corridor for the movement of aid in the city of Taez and a prisoner swap that sought to build confidence.

Lack of trust between the two sides has been an issue.

“The coalition kept the pressure on the Houthis precisely to facilitate the peace process and we have fully supported the implementa­tion of the Stockholm Agreement,” Dr Gargash said.

This year, the UAE said it was moving its troops in Yemen to shift the emphasis of the coalition’s effort from a “military-first strategy to a

Tension remains high over Tehran’s nuclear deal from which the US withdrew more than a year ago

peace-first strategy”, the government said at the time.

“Indeed, the UAE redeployed its forces away from Hodeidah to allow space for the agreement to work,” Dr Gargash said.

The UAE’s priorities in the coalition will be to continue “to provide humanitari­an aid, counter [terrorist] threats and protect maritime security”, Dr Gargash said.

It will also lend “ongoing support to the government of Yemen and the UN in their efforts to achieve a sustainabl­e political solution”.

Security assurances for neighbouri­ng states must be part of any sustainabl­e political solution in Yemen, he said.

“The internatio­nal community can be instrument­al in helping. And the UAE will certainly continue to play its part,” Dr Gargash said.

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