The UN and Arab League envoy to Syria, Lakhdar Brahimi, said
Saturday from Tehran that Iran’s participation at the Geneva II conference on
the Syrian crisis, scheduled for next month, was essential.
Diplomat sources revealed to Zaman Alwasl on condition of anonymity that the envoy insistency to reserve a seat for the Iranians in Geneva II, was behind refusing his request to visit Saudi Arabia, In addition to his personal support for Bashar al-Assad to stay until the end of his term in mid-2014, source added.
Brahimi arrived in Tehran on Saturday, as part of his Mideast
tour, which started in Cairo last week, to
prepare for talks on resolving the conflict. Over the past week, he was also in
Jordan, Kuwait, Iraq and Turkey, Associated Press reported.
From Tehran Brahimi
said, “We believe that the participation of Iran in the Geneva conference is
natural and necessary as well as fruitful, so we are hopeful that this
invitation is made,” according to Press TV.
Saudis think that Brahimi's
effort is no more than wasting time with mounting disappointment with the
American policy as well the vogue diplomacy with Iran, which is a partner in
Syrian bloodshed, observers said to Zaman Awasl.
On Tuesday, Prince Turki al-Faisal, a former head
of Saudi intelligence in an interview with Al-Monitor, said, “It is up to the Iranians to show that their
sweet and sensible talk is going to be translated into action, “ adding,
“when and if that happens then there is a chance for the situation between, not
just the Kingdom and Iran, but also between Iran and the rest of the world to
improve.”
Prince
Turki added that the kingdom has been direct in its dealings with Iran about
the issues of tension between the two countries, telling its officials, “You
can’t have it both ways. You can’t deal with us and then go and support
somebody who wants to overturn us. And this is what they’ve been doing in
Lebanon, this is what they’ve been doing in Syria, this is what they’re doing
in Bahrain, and what they’re doing in Iraq etc., so this is how we deal with
Iran.”
Prince
Turki explained Saudi Arabia’s consistent diplomatic approach to Iran and other
issues, saying, “When something comes like denying the seat or not accepting
the seat [at the US Security Council], everybody is surprised and taken aback
and shocked. It doesn’t come from thin air. We never act impulsively. It’s a
hallmark of Saudi character. We were patient for a long time, but when we need
to take action, we take it quickly.”
The Geneva II conference
on Syria is scheduled for November 23 and 24 and will attempt to get
Syria’s rival sides to agree on a transitional government in that country based
on a plan adopted in Geneva in June 2012.
The Saudi-backed opposition
group, the Syrian National Coalition, has said in the past that it will only
negotiate if it is agreed from the start that Assad will leave power at the end
of a transition period. Many rebel fighters inside Syria flatly reject
negotiating with Assad’s regime.
Mr. Ahmad Jarba, Head of
the Coalition said recently, ''Let Geneva II fall'' in accordance to the Kingdom
will.
Prince Turki al-Faisal
U.S., Saudi drift over Syria
Prince Turki al-Faisal voiced in Al Monitor
interview “a high level of disappointment in the U.S. government’s dealings” on
Syria and the Palestinian issue.
Veteran analyst David Ignatius in deep insight for
Washington Post said,
The U.S. administration’ lack of communication with the Saudis and other Arab
allies is mystifying at a time when the U.S. is exploring new policy
initiatives, such as working with the Russians on dismantling chemical weapons
in Syria and negotiating a possible nuclear deal with Iran. Those U.S. policy
initiatives are sound, in the view of many analysts (including me), but they
worry the Saudis and others—making close consultation all the more important,.
Saudi
King Abdullah privately voiced his frustration with U.S. policy in a lunch in
Riyadh Monday with King Abdullah of Jordan and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed
of the U.A.E., according to a knowledgeable Arab official. The Saudi monarch
“is convinced the U.S. is unreliable,” this official said. “I don’t see a
genuine desire to fix it” on either side, he added.
The Saudis’ pique, in turn, has reinforced the
White House’s frustration that Riyadh is an ungrateful and sometimes petulant
ally. When Secretary of State John Kerry was in the region a few weeks ago, he
asked to visit Bandar. The Saudi prince is said to have responded that he was
on his way out of the kingdom, but that Kerry could meet him at the airport.
This response struck U.S. officials as high-handed, Ignatius said.
Editing by Mohamed Hamdan
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