Iran Warns Saudi to Stop 'Adding Fuel to Fire'
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية
Iran warned Saudi Arabia to stop working against it on Wednesday as their diplomatic crisis intensified despite efforts to defuse a row that has raised fears of regional instability.
In the latest salvo in a dispute that has seen Saudi Arabia and some of its Sunni Arab allies cut ties with Tehran, Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said Riyadh must end its prolonged efforts to confront Iran.
"For the past two-and-a-half years, Saudi Arabia has opposed Iran's diplomacy," Zarif said at a joint press conference in Tehran with Iraqi Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari.
"Saudi Arabia has moved against our efforts and, unfortunately, they opposed the nuclear agreement," Zarif said.
"This trend of creating tension must stop. We need to stand united... and stop those who are adding fuel to the fire."
The spike in tensions comes after Iran last year secured a historic nuclear deal with world powers led by the United States, causing major concern in longtime U.S. ally Riyadh.
The row between Saudi Arabia, the main Sunni power, and Shiite-dominated Iran erupted following Riyadh's execution on Saturday of prominent Shiite cleric and activist Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr.
His death sparked Shiite demonstrations in many countries including Iran, where protesters stormed and set fire to the Saudi embassy in Tehran and the kingdom's consulate in second city Mashhad.
Riyadh cut ties with Tehran in response and was joined by several of its Sunni Arab allies including Bahrain and Sudan. The United Arab Emirates also downgraded relations with Iran and Kuwait recalled its ambassador.
The row has raised fears of an increase in sectarian tensions in the Middle East that could derail efforts to resolve pressing issues including the wars in Syria and Yemen.
The United Nations and Western governments have expressed deep concern, urging both sides to reduce tensions.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry has made repeated calls to both Iranian and Saudi leaders.
"He is urging calm. He is stressing the need for dialogue and engagement, and thirdly, reminding that, again, there's lots of work to be done in the region," State Department spokesman John Kirby told reporters in Washington on Tuesday.
"It's important to work through that tension, work through those disagreements, so that we can all work harder together on other issues which are affecting the Middle East writ large," he said.
Cooperation between Saudi Arabia and Iran is crucial in resolving a range of issues in the Middle East, where they are often on opposing sides.
In Syria, Iran is supporting the government of President Bashar Assad against rebel groups, some backed by Saudi Arabia.
In Yemen, Riyadh is leading a military intervention against Iran-backed Shiite rebels who have seized control of large parts of the country.
U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has also been in touch with Saudi and Iranian leaders to urge calm, and the Security Council has condemned the attack on Riyadh's diplomatic missions.
On Tuesday, Iran's President Hassan Rouhani accused Saudi Arabia of focusing attention on the incident to "cover its crime" of executing Nimr.
"We have never sought to create tension. We have always adopted a policy of interaction and dialogue," Zarif said, reiterating that the violent scenes at the embassy were "not justified".
"All Iranian officials condemn it," he added.
This week has seen several sectarian attacks in Iraq as the row escalated, including the bombings of two Sunni mosques, raising fears the country could plunge back into all-out civil conflict.
"Some people want to create the spark that will reignite war among Iraqis and we must stop them because such acts only serve the enemies of Iraq," said Mohammed Abdelfattah, a Sunni cleric from the Iraqi town of Hilla where several attacks have taken place.
Shiite-majority Iraq has close ties with Tehran.
Jaafari, who was to hold talks later with Rouhani, said Iraq was seeking a potential diplomatic role to help resolve the crisis and echoed the concerns about sectarianism.
"I have spoken to the foreign ministers of some of the Arab countries to reduce the consequences of this issue and prevent enemies from dragging the region into a war that can have no winners," Jaafari said.
Media reports said his counterpart from Oman, which has often played a mediating role in the region, was also expected in the Iranian capital on Wednesday.
Oman's foreign ministry on Wednesday expressed its "deep regret" over the embassy attack but the country did not announce any measures against Iran.
Nimr, one of 47 men executed on Saturday, was a driving force behind 2011 anti-government protests in Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province.
He was arrested in 2012 after calling for two Saudi governorates to be separated from the kingdom.

"For the past two-and-a-half years, Saudi Arabia has opposed Iran's diplomacy," Zarif said
and so it should coz your agenda is to interfere and support criminals and militias. Now, if you love these people so much and care about them, take them to Iran and spare the whole region all these problems. Iran is a large country and can accommodate the shias of Lebanon, Bahrain, and Saudi Arabia.

"This trend of creating tension must stop. We need to stand united... and stop those who are adding fuel to the fire."
Sending the shia hezbollah, the shia revolutionary guard, the shia afghanis and pakistanis to kill Syrians in support of a sectarian criminal ruler is not considered by this Iranian as contributing to creating tension.

The difference between Iran and Saudi, the latter used a justice system based on terrorists facts to kill those 47 outlaws. Iran on the other hands send its mafia secret agents via hizbollah and others to assisinate politicians and its enemies.

Typical Iranian jargon that can only be swallowed by the followers of his wilayat al faqih.

Strange and funny how people who are against Iran are automatically labelled ZIONISTS.
This technique doesn't work anymore! In fact it does one thing: create more anger against Iran and their local followers.

Why is it that you take Iran as a role model when it is of backaged culture....similar to what you are describing in your posts about Saudi Arabia???

How does Zarif of Iran explain his commanders claiming Iran now controls 4 Arab capitals?

texas
these trolls are not worth your time for one second. They are well known: flamethrower/the_roar, mowaten/theresistance4.0 and his 500 aliases, southern and mystic and their 50 aliases.

funny how braindead hezbis here cannot assume that iran finances terrorism too.. so only saudis are the bad guys? iran is a victim and never ever resort to terror? assad did for many years too but still they deny it....
how can one ever discuss with such lame and low people unable to act like men and assume they support countries that use terrorism too.....