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Saudi Arabia
works to curb Iran’s influence
RIYADH (Saudi Arabia)—Worried by Iran’s deepening involvement in the
Arab world, Saudi Arabia has been working quietly to curtail the Shiite
nation’s influence and prevent the marginalization of Sunni Muslims in
the region’s hotspots.
Analysts say the tug-of-war between the two Mideast powers signals a new
chapter in an uneasy relationship, one that has swung over the years
between wariness and — at times — outright confrontation. On the
surface, both countries have maintained the civil front that has marked
ties since a thaw in relations in the early 1990s.
“But events on the ground indicate that the two countries are working
against each other as their differences are played out outside their
borders,” said Ibrahim Bayram, a reporter for the Lebanese An-Nahar
newspaper, who follows the country’s pro-Iranian Hezbollah group.
Saudi Arabia, a key U.S. ally in the region, has been putting its
economic and diplomatic weight behind groups in direct confrontation
with factions backed by Iran in every major conflict zone in the region
— Iraq, Lebanon and the Palestinian territories.
The kingdom has also expressed concerns over Iran’s nuclear program. The
U.S. contends Iran is seeking to develop nuclear weapons, which Iran
denies. But Saudi Arabia has fears even about a peaceful nuclear program
because of the possible environmental threat and the potential for
conflict between Iran and U.S. troops stationed in Kuwait, Qatar and
Bahrain.
A Saudi official said Iran has sent messages expressing its desire to
work with the kingdom to resolve the area’s conflicts. But the official
said Iran’s actions speak louder than those messages, making Saudi
Arabia cautious in dealing with Tehran. He spoke on condition of
anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue. The tense situation
has also made the kingdom more determined to explore ways to find a
settlement to Mideast upheavals on its own.
Saudi Arabia has stepped up attempts to reconcile Iraq’s fractious
groups and has invited Iraqi leaders for talks, including anti-American
Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr and Harith al-Dhari, head of Iraq’s
influential Sunni Association of Muslim Scholars. It has also been
talking to Iraq’s Sunnis to urge them to renounce violence and become
more involved in the political process.
Elsewhere, the kingdom is supporting the U.S.-backed Lebanese Prime
Minister Fuad Saniora, who is facing street protests organized by
Hezbollah meant to topple the government. The Saudis are also backing
beleaguered Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who is trying to work
out a new unity government with the militant Hamas group, which is
allied to Iran.
The relationship between Iran and Saudi Arabia has long been uneasy,
especially after the 1979 Iranian revolution. Saudi Arabia sided with
Baghdad in the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war, and Riyadh and Tehran were openly
hostile at the height of the conflict. Iran frequently called on Muslims
to overthrow the Saudi ruling family, seize its oil wealth and strip it
of its role as guardian of Islamic holy places. Riyadh accused Tehran of
trying to undermine its security and broke off relations in 1988. But
distrust between the two countries eased after Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini’s death in 1989, and diplomatic relations were restored shortly
after the 1991 Gulf War.
Saudi analysts say Iran is now trying to wrest the traditional
leadership role Riyadh has played in the region. But Saudi Arabia will
“not allow Iran to expand at its expense as a big regional power,” said
Dawood al-Shirian, a Saudi journalist. “Iran is acting as a Persian
state and not as an Islamic state,” he said. “The conflict in the region
is not a Sunni-Shiite conflict. It’s a Persian-Arab conflict.”
The view from Iran is different, said Mashaallah Shamsolvaezin, an
adviser to the Middle East Strategic Studies Center in Tehran, which is
closely affiliated with the Iranian Foreign Ministry.
He said a change in Iranian foreign policy to focus on improving
economic and political ties with Middle Eastern countries instead of
Europe has prompted the Saudi fears. He said the political shift is not
coming at the expense of traditional powers like Saudi Arabia and Egypt.
He blamed Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s “radical” rhetoric for
Tehran’s failure to send a reassuring message about its policy shifts.
—Agencies |