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Saturday 28 October 2017 - 12:17

Saudi Arabia ’Not Normal’ Since Iranian Revolution in 1979: Crown Prince

Story Code : 680033
Saudi Arabia ’Not Normal’ Since Iranian Revolution in 1979: Crown Prince
The de facto Saudi leader also vowed to return the country to “moderate Islam” and asked for global support to transform the hardline kingdom into an open society that empowers citizens and lures investors.

In an interview with the Guardian, the 32-year-old heir to the Saudi throne said the Persian Gulf Arab state's abnormal policies during past decades were a reaction to the Iranian revolution, which successive leaders “didn’t know how to deal with"

In 1979 Iranian nation, led by late Ayatollah Khomeini, ousted US-backed Pahlavi dynasty and established an Islamic Republic. The Islamic Revolution intimidated neighboring arab kingdoms as they were worry that their nations follow Iranian nation's suit and topple their dictatorship.

To avoid this happening the oil-rich Arab kingdoms did their best not to allow the young Islamic Revolution to become strong and play as role model for other Muslim nations. Backed by the west, that was angry at Iranian nation over overthrowing its puppet regime of Pahlavi,  Most of Persian Gulf Arab regimes went as far as emboldening and supporting Saddam Hussein, former Iraqi dictator, to wage an eight-year-old  war on Iran that claimed lives of hundreds of thousands of people.

“What happened in the last 30 years is not Saudi Arabia. What happened in the region in the last 30 years is not the Middle East. After the Iranian revolution in 1979, people wanted to copy this model in different countries, one of them is Saudi Arabia. We didn’t know how to deal with it. And the problem spread all over the world. Now is the time to get rid of it,” Mohhamad bin Salam.

However, it was not only the kingdom's worry  about spread of the Iran’s Islamic Revolution doctrine including expansion of its religious democracy version across the region that Saudi has been struggling to hit Iran.

More developments, particularly during past 10 years,  pushed Riyadh leaders towards embarking on a more confrontational policy against Iran:

1. Axis of Resistance wings, especially Lebanon’s Hezbollah, gain of power.

2. Foundation of democratic Iraqi government in which the Shiites rose to center of power after Saddam’s fall.

3. Yemen uprising that posed risk of rise of an independent democracy in the kingdom’s southern neighbor.
 
4. Bahrain uprising against the pro-Riyadh monarchy.

5. Syria’s Assad stay in power as a key party to the Resistance camp and expanding anti-terror successes.

6. Failure of anti-Iranian Saudi projects including ISIS terrorist group in Syria and Iraq as Iran’s allies.

In the Saudi decision makers' mind, the Iranian government as a party encouraging establishment of democratic, independent, and anti-Western governments needed to be overthrown or at least impaired as much as possible.

To this end, the absolutely-ruled Arab monarchy has implemented a set of policies, including the propagation of Iranophobia across the region. The following accusations serve its Iranophobic aims:

First, Iran is the destabilizing party in the region. Riyadh alleges that Tehran destabilizes the region through its support for what it calls terrorist groups that in real world translates to support for resistant groups such as Lebanese Hezbollah and Palestinian Hamas movements. It also accuses Iran of backing the Shiites in Yemen, Bahrain, and even the kingdom’s eastern regions.

Second, Iran is meddling in the regional countries domestic affairs.

Third, the Islamic Republic is struggling to dominate the Arab countries.

Forth, Tehran id spreading Shiite ideology across the region.

Fifth, Iran is developing nuclear and missile programs that are a threat to the region.

But Tehran has its clarifications in response to the Iranophobic Saudi accusations:

1. Such groups as Hezbollah and Palestine’s Hamas are blacklisted as terrorist groups by the Israeli regime and the West. Saudi Arabia, an ally to the West, followed suit and labelled the same groups as terrorist entities. This is against the noticeable knowledge of the regional and international nations that widely recognize the two groups as resistant and formed only in opposition to the Israeli violations and occupation, and are solely defensive in nature. Saudi Arabia uses the accusations to blameshift and thus escape forward as it is under pressure by the world, even by its Western allies, for its support for the Wahhabi and takfiri terrorists that have brought about chaos to the whole region.

2. Iran does not intervene in Yemen and Saudi Arabia, otherwise things in the two crisis-hit countries have never reached the current levels. On the opposite side, Riyadh sent to Bahrain in 2011 suppressive forces to put down popular protests that seek democracy replacement with the despotic rule in their country. Moreover, the kingdom led an Arab military coalition’s aggression against the neighboring Yemen that so far killed over 13,000 people and injured many more and massively destroyed the country’s infrastructure. Despite the daily atrocities in the two countries, Riyadh accuses Tehran of meddling in Bahrain and Yemen's internal affairs while giving no documents for its claims.

3. Iran presence in Iraq and Syria is asked for by Baghdad and Damascus governments for the purpose of battling terrorism. The two countries' leaders several times highlighted this invitation, adding that Iran never meddled in their domestic affairs, and that they are thankful to Tehran for its contribution to the anti-terror operations.

4. Iran has repeatedly suggested that people of the crisis-hit countries should be allowed to freely determine their fate, without foreign intervention. On the other side, Saudi Arabia and its Western allies not only intervened in Syria, Yemen, and Bahrain with disrespect to their people but also they assertively dictate that Syria’s Assad must step down and Bahrain and Yemeni leaders must stay in power. They have spared no effort so far towards their aims.

5. The Iranian officials constantly accentuate the need for various Islamic branches' cohesion. This is while the Sunni Saudi Arabia, as its sectarian nature commands, attacks the Shiites in Yemen, Bahrain, and other places. When some sides offer support, even food aids, for the defenseless people in victim countries, they are accused of sectarianism.

The Al Saud rulers are in fact caught in multi-faceted predicament stemming from their illegitimate rule, reliance on the anti-Islamic allies, and past and present irrational policies. Under these conditions, their choice predictably is resorting to baseless allegations against their archrival Iran.
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