CNN claims: Riyadh is seeking mediation in Tehran-Washington relations
The US media has claimed that Saudi Arabia, which does not consider the consequences of tension in Tehran-Washington relations for its regional interests and in favor of the current state of Riyadh-Tehran relations, is trying to tighten US President Donald Trump to mediate in order to mediate Find an agreement between Iran and the US.
According to RCO News Agency, the US media claims Saudi Arabia is ready to mediate between the Trump administration and Iran to reach an agreement to limit Iran’s nuclear program.
CNN reported that Saudi Arabia may now have a greater desire to obtain a nuclear weapon, citing a claim about Iran’s position following recent developments in the region. Riyadh hopes to create a White House for the White House through close relations with US President Donald Trump.
Hoping to create polymeteries between Iran and the US
It is unclear whether Saudi Arabia has made an official offer, but this reflects Riyadh’s willingness to improve relations with its former rival (Iran) and gain a place at the negotiating table for a new possible agreement.
Trump has signed a note about his first government policy towards Iran, called the “maximum pressure campaign”, and then, his government, and then his government It has imposed oil sanctions against Iran, which has been condemned by Iran. In addition, the supreme leader of Iran stated that negotiating with the US “is not clever.”
The US and Saudi State Department did not respond to CNN’s request to explain, the US media said. The Iranian delegation’s representative to the United Nations also said that he has no idea.
Saudi Arabia publicly welcomed Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers in year 6, but unknowingly, the defeat of the Barack Obama government in dealing with its concerns about Tehran’s regional activities, especially its missile program and groups called “proxy forces. It was angry in the area, which was a threat to the stability of the region. Saudi Arabia, later, welcomed Trump’s withdrawal from the nuclear deal in year 6.
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Arakchi in Riyadh, October 2
A year after the Trump administration’s withdrawal from the nuclear deal, Saudi Arabia’s oil facility was targeted by a major drone and missile attack that reduced the world’s largest oil exporter by half. Yemen, which some countries in the region and the West claim to be Iranian -backed, claimed repeatedly by Iranian officials, claimed responsibility for the attack, but the United States blamed Iran that eventually, from military action to Defended his Saudi ally.
But tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran have since declined significantly. On March 5, the two countries announced a surprise agreement with China’s mediation to normalize their relations. Saudi officials see the agreement as a great achievement, which believes that Riyadh of its benefits, including the halting of Yemen’s Ansarullah attacks on Saudi Arabia and protecting the country from Iran and the Zionist regime in the midst of concerns over the possibility of targeting. Giving the oil facilities of the Arab Gulf of the Persian Gulf has benefited if its facilities are targeted.
Saudi officials see the region’s current prospects as a historic opportunity to reduce tensions with Iran and improve relations, and they are reluctant to participate in any US confrontation with Iran.
They are also worried that Tehran may be more willing to produce a nuclear bomb and see a nuclear agreement as a way to prevent it. They believe that “severely weakened Iran” is not in Saudi Arabia’s favor, as Riyadh has revised its foreign policy to prioritize its economic interests and see more regional instability as an obstacle to its progress.
Riyadh’s increasing influence
CNN goes on to say: “Fisher Moqdad, a senior researcher at the Middle East Institute in Washington, said Riyadh’s foreign policy” seeks to diversify its options at the level of Saudi foreign policy. “It has been an international and international that allows it to be flexible and pragmatic if necessary.”
He told CNN: “The willingness to mediate between President Trump and Iran allows the kingdom (Saudi Arabia) to implicitly remove himself from Trump’s maximum pressure campaign against Tehran.”
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The presence of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and US President Donald Trump at the Japan June meeting
However, he says, given the “disbelief left” between Saudi Arabia and Iran, it is unlikely to go beyond a diplomatic signal.
Riyadh’s relations with Trump and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s influence on him will probably be tested with a controversial US President’s plan to control Gaza and expel the Palestinian population to transform the area into a coastal tourist area. The proposal may disrupt the process of normalizing relations between Saudi Arabia and the Zionist regime that Prime Minister Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu have been seeking.
However, last week, Trump spoke optimistic about Saudi Arabia and the Zionist regime, claiming that Riyadh did not want to form an independent Palestinian state in return.
Saudi Arabia responded quickly and rejected any plans to expel Palestinians from its lands. Riyadh has emphasized that there will be no normalization of relations without the formation of a Palestinian state.
However, Saudi Arabia’s relations with Trump remains strong. While other US allies are doing cautiously not to provoke the US president, Saudi Arabia’s international status and influence will probably continue to grow in the Trump administration.
Trump has even said that Saudi Arabia may be the first destination of his foreign trip as US president, in which Ben Salman may be unjustified in the mediators of negotiations between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin to end Europe’s biggest war since time. Be World War II.
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