The National - News

EGYPT AND IRAN TAKE STEPS TO NORMALISE RELATIONS

▶ Countries expected to exchange ambassador­s within months

- HAMZA HENDAWI Cairo

Egypt and Iran are expected to exchange ambassador­s within months as part of a process mediated by Oman to normalise relations between the regional powers, Egyptian officials have told The National.

Two officials said that a meeting had been agreed to in principle between President Abdel Fattah El Sisi of Egypt and the President of Iran, Ebrahim Raisi.

The meeting is likely to take place by the end of the year.

The news comes after Oman’s ruler, Sultan Haitham, paid a two-day visit to Egypt where he and Mr El Sisi discussed Cairo’s relations with Tehran, according to officials.

Oman enjoys close relations with Muslim, non-Arab Iran and has frequently assumed mediating roles in regional conflicts or in disputes pitting Tehran’s clergy-led regime against other government­s, in the Arab world and in the West.

Iran said it wanted better relations with Egypt, the most populous Arab nation.

The Egyptian government, however, has been silent on relations with Iran, but regional media has been reporting an impending thaw in relations in recent weeks.

Normalised relations with Iran, the officials said, ensure Tehran’s goodwill in relation to Cairo’s efforts to forge closer economic and commercial ties with countries such as Iraq, Syria and Lebanon, where it wields significan­t influence.

The officials said Cairo would also try to persuade Iran to drop or at least curtail its support for Hamas and Islamic Jihad, the two main militant Palestinia­n groups in the Gaza Strip, which borders Egypt.

Frequent outbursts of hostilitie­s between the two militant groups and Israel present a security threat to Egypt and also impede its efforts at reconcilia­tion between the pair and the Palestinia­n Authority in the West Bank, a goal that could be the prelude to the resumption of long-stalled Palestinia­nIsraeli negotiatio­ns.

Mid-level diplomats and intelligen­ce officials from Iran and Egypt have been holding behind-closed-door consultati­ons on normalisin­g relations since March.

The last round of talks was held earlier this month in Baghdad, whose government has close ties with Tehran.

Besides bilateral relations, the talks also touched on reducing tension in places where Iran wields significan­t influence, such as Yemen, Lebanon and Syria, by supporting allied Shiite government­s or armed groups.

A thaw in relations between Cairo and Tehran would add a layer to an continuing regional realignmen­t that is changing the political landscape.

Saudi Arabia, for example, has agreed to restore diplomatic relations with Iran that were severed in 2016, thus removing a major source of tension in the Middle East.

Egypt and Turkey, at odds for a decade, have also been working to normalise relations.

The eight-year war in Yemen, where Iran has backed the Houthis against the internatio­nally recognised government, supported by a Saudi-led military coalition, has significan­tly quietened amid diplomatic moves to end the conflict.

Syria, where Iran and the Tehran-backed Lebanese group Hezbollah have significan­t influence, was readmitted to the Arab League this month.

Its once-isolated president, Bashar Al Assad, attended last week’s Arab summit in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, for the first time in 12 years.

Syria’s membership in the Arab League was suspended more than a decade ago after the Assad government cracked down on anti-government protests.

The readmissio­n of Syria into the Arab fold was warmly welcomed by Iran.

Tehran’s relations with Cairo, a close ally of the US, Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries, have been fraught since the ousting of Iran’s Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Pahlavi died in Egypt in 1980, where he is buried with members of his family. This has created tension between Cairo and Tehran.

Relations further deteriorat­ed when Iran’s government named a Tehran street after Khalid Al Islambouli, an Egyptian army officer who led a team of assassins that killed

Egyptian president Anwar Sadat during a 1981 military parade in Cairo.

Repeated requests by Cairo to remove his name were denied.

More recently, relations have been tense over what Cairo sees as the meddling of Iran in the internal affairs of Arab nations such as Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen.

Mr El Sisi’s government has repeatedly declared Egypt’s willingnes­s to come to the aid of its Gulf Arab allies and benefactor­s if they faced an external threat.

Unlike Saudi Arabia, which closed its embassy in Tehran in 2016, Egypt has maintained diplomatic representa­tion in Iran since the Islamic revolution. However, it has only a charge d’affaires running its mission in Tehran.

Iran, on the other hand, has a functionin­g embassy in Cairo.

A thaw in relations between Cairo and Tehran would add a new layer to an ongoing regional realignmen­t

 ?? ?? Top, Egyptian president Anwar Sadat, second right, with the deposed shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the shah’s wife, Farah, and Sadat’s wife Jihan, in Cairo in 1980; above, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El Sisi, left, and Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi
Top, Egyptian president Anwar Sadat, second right, with the deposed shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the shah’s wife, Farah, and Sadat’s wife Jihan, in Cairo in 1980; above, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El Sisi, left, and Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi

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