'Domino
Effect': Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Warns of Saudi Collapse
As
tensions simmer between Tehran and Riyadh, the deputy chief of Iran’s
Revolutionary Guards has warned that Saudi Arabia will soon
"collapse" if it continues its pursuit of regional
destabilization.
7
January, 2015
Iran
has made no secret about its outrage over Saudi Arabia’s
decision to execute 47 people on Saturday, including a
prominent Shiite cleric. Mass protests broke out across the
globe, and Iran has had its diplomatic ties with Bahrain, Sudan,
Djibouti, and Saudi Arabia, severed.
On
Thursday, the second-in-command of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards
warned the kingdom that its continued pursuit of sectarian
policies will ultimately come back to harm Riyadh.
"The
policies of the Saudi regime will have a domino effect and they
will be buried under the avalanche they created," said
Brigadier General Hossein Salami, according to Fars news agency.
"If
the Saudis do not correct their path, their regime will collapse
in coming years."
Salami
also compared Riyadh’s policies to those of Saddam
Hussein, prior to his ouster in the US-led invasion
of Iraq.
"The
path the Saudi regime is taking is like the one Saddam took
in the 1980s and 90s. He started a war with Iran, executed
prominent clerics and top officials, suppressed dissidents and ended
up having that miserable fate."
The
general called Riyadh’s decision to sever diplomatic ties
with Iran "irrational and hateful," and added that the
violence in both Iraq and Syria were "the results
of Saudi’s sectarian policies in the region."
Earlier
this week, an analysis released by US-based political consultant
firm Eurasia Group also agreed that the kingdom’s reckless actions
stem from a kind of existential panic.
"Saudi
Arabia is in serious trouble, and they know it," Ian
Bremmer, president of Eurasia Group, told Business Insider.
According
to the analysis, "The Saudi Kingdom faces a growing risk
of destabilizing discord within the royal family this year,
and its increasingly isolated status will lead it to act more
aggressively across the Middle East this year."
While
there are many factors contributing to Riyadh’s identity
crisis, the most significant may be the Iran nuclear deal.
"The
key source of external Saudi anxiety is Iran, soon to be
free of sanctions," Eurasia Group’s report reads.
As
Tehran abides by the accord, international sanctions will
gradually be lifted. Saudi Arabia fears that an Iran no longer
hindered by international penalties will present a threat
to Riyadh’s regional influence.
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