Iran proposes regional anti-terror bloc to include Saudis

Iran proposes regional anti-terror bloc to include Saudis
Tehran proposed on Sunday that Muslim countries - including rival Saudi Arabia - should join together to promote regional peace, asserting that Iran is "not the enemy".
2 min read
11 December, 2016
Larijani told a security conference that countries should join together to promote "regional peace" [AFP]
Iran has proposed the formation of a bloc of Muslim countries to fight terrorism and boost economic cooperation that would include its regional rival Saudi Arabia. 

Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani told a security conference on Sunday that the two countries, along with Turkey, Egypt, Iraq and Pakistan, should join together to promote "regional peace based on Islam, defending the Palestinian people, fighting terrorism and economic interests."

Shia-majority Iran and mainly Sunni Saudi Arabia are bitterly divided, and support opposite sides in the civil wars in Syria and Yemen.

Saudi Arabia cut diplomatic ties with Iran in January after Iranian demonstrators stormed Saudi diplomatic facilities to protest the execution of a prominent Saudi Shia cleric.

Larijani said Saudi Arabia and other nations should know that Iran is not "their enemy."

He said Iran is opposed to "warmongering in Syria and Yemen" and wants to resolve regional conflicts through "national solidarity governments resorting to democratic methods." 

"Iran is not after creating an empire and hegemony in the region," he said. "Our viewpoint is aimed at improving unity."

Iran is a close ally of Syrian President Bashar Assad, and sponsors the Hizballah armed group in Lebanon as well as state-sanctioned Iraqi Shia militias.

At a two-day security summit in Bahrain last week, the leaders of Western-allied Arab Gulf countries agreed on the need to counter Iran's "destabilising activities" in the region.

Saudi Arabia announced the formation of a 34-member "Islamic military alliance" against terrorism nearly a year ago, which excluded Iran.