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Is Iran’s change of heart for real?

January 20, 2017

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Is Iran’s change of heart for real?

Zahid ImranbyZahid Imran
January 20, 2017
in World Digest
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Arab News
Abdulrahman Al-Rashed


Iran and Saudi Arabia managed to stop the obstructions to the presidential election process in Lebanon. We achieved success.” This statement came from Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif at the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos. Before a large international audience, he expressed his country’s desire to cooperate with Saudi Arabia in order to resolve the problems of “Syria, Yemen, Bahrain and elsewhere in the region.”
What was offered to Saudi Arabia in an open forum by the Iranian minister was a proposal for joint action to end conflicts in the region. It is a new call.
Why? Are we seeing a shift in Iran’s aggressive policy, which considered its aim to put Saudi Arabia and its allies under siege? Or is it an Iranian desire to preempt developments on the international scene? Is it perhaps due to a change in US policy due to Obama’s departure and the arrival of a new US administration, which has openly expressed its intention to confront Iran? Or is there another possibility that we should ignore the signals sent by Russia that it does not want to remain an ally and partner in the war with Iran and Syria?
The third possibility is that Zarif’s remarks about his country’s desire to cooperate with Saudi Arabia are only talk in a public relations program to improve the image of the Republic of Iran at Davos.
What was suggested by Zarif about the prospects of cooperation between Saudi Arabia and Iran, specifically to work together to end the conflicts in the region, is not something to be condemned but it is strange that it was voiced by Iran.
It might be a positive development but for the fact that the Tehran regime’s interpretation of “cooperation” means that we accept what is imposed by Iran including, for example, its aggression in Syria and Yemen. Iran is now seeking to impose its idea of “cooperation” in Syria at the Astana conference; it attempted something similar in Bahrain but the idea was turned down by the Gulf states. Was there, indeed, any real cooperation between the two countries in Lebanon? Was there anything that could serve as a model worthy of reproducing?
The acceptance of Michel Aoun as president of Lebanon happened after a tug of war between the Lebanese forces themselves. And after Lebanon’s being without a president for a long period which prevented action by government and state institutions, Iran’s agents were not able to achieve their aims. This was especially true when Saudi Arabia announced that it would not involve itself in Lebanon’s problems. Even when it came to removing garbage from the streets in Beirut, the Iranians were not successful. As long as the new Lebanese government does not adopt hostile attitudes toward Saudi Arabia and does not allow hostilities and as long as the Lebanese factions are satisfied, Riyadh’s reservations will no longer apply — and that is what has happened. As for the oil cooperation referred to by Zarif, the fact is that the cooperation occurred between Saudi Arabia and Russia without Iran’s involvement. The Russian government vowed to pressure the Iranians to respect their share of the previously agreed production. This does not mean that what Zarif said was, in essence, wrong: “I see no reason for hostile policies between Iran and Saudi Arabia. Indeed, we can work together to end the tragic situation of the people of Syria, Yemen, Bahrain and elsewhere in the region.” In the region, Iran is the only country that has an aggressive policy.

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