Saudi
Arabia warns Iran: Will not tolerate threats to Gulf state
The
warning comes following Ahmadinejad visit to an Island claimed by
both Tehran and UAE. Saudi Prince: Any harm to any of the countries
touches us all.
3
May, 2012
Saudi
Arabia repeated on Wednesday that it would not tolerate threats to
the Gulf Arab states' sovereignty, the latest warning to Iran after
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's visit to an island claimed by both
Tehran and the United Arab Emirates.
The
warning, the third in as many weeks by a member of the six-nation
Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), comes amid increased nervousness in
the region over Iran.
Shi'ite-led
unrest is resurgent in Bahrain a year after the ruling Al Khalifa
family brought in Saudi and UAE troops to help suppress an uprising
seen by Sunni Muslim Gulf rulers as sectarian in nature and driven by
Shi'ite giant Iran.
"Any
harm that comes across any of our countries is harm that touches us
all," Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Nayef said in a speech at a
meeting of GCC interior ministers in Riyadh.
Nayef
also condemned what he called Iran's "occupation" of the
island and its role in events in Bahrain.
"We
stress that Saudi Arabia and the rest of the council countries are
standing in a unified line with Bahrain and the UAE to protect
sovereignty and stability, considering their security a part of the
council's security as a whole."
Ahmadinejad
made a rare visit on April 11 to Abu Musa, one of three Gulf islands
also claimed by the UAE and located near oil shipping routes at the
mouth of the Gulf, the Strait of Hormuz.
Bahrain's
Formula One race last month drew fresh attention to ongoing clashes
between Bahraini security forces and mostly Shi'ite protesters,
although the main Shi'ite Islamist Wefaq party denies any links with
Iran.
Tensions
with Iran have increased since the Gulf Arab countries' western
allies tightened sanctions over Iran's suspected nuclear weapons
program. Tehran says its nuclear activities are entirely peaceful.
Saudi
foreign minister Prince Saud al-Faisal said in a speech over the
weekend that Gulf Arab states are pushing ahead with plans for a
political union that would involve joint foreign and defense
policies, an idea floated by Saudi King Abdullah last December.
After
Ahmadinejad's visit to Abu Musa, some 60 km (40 miles) off the UAE
coast, the Islamic Republic said its sovereignty over the three
islands was not negotiable but it has also called for talks with the
UAE to clear up "misunderstandings".
Iranian
Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi, quoted by the student news agency
ISNA, said Iran wanted to "have the best possible relations with
the UAE, as our trade and economic relations are significant."
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