29 Jan 2012 By Tariq Alhomayed Our region has witnessed, and is witnessing, a
series of events that show that Tehran is now
receiving blow after blow, rather than receiving any
kind of deal! Here we see Baghdad and Beirut moving to
address the comments issued by the commander of Iran's
Quds Force, Qassem Suleimani, who said that Lebanon
and Iraq are within the area of Iranian influence,
thus forcing Tehran to issue and official denial of
Suleimani's remarks. In spite of the Iranian denials,
on more than one level, Iraq issued a statement in
angry protest, and Lebanon also rose up against Iran.
These two stances, Iraqi and Lebanese, can be
considered themselves to be a blow to Tehran. As for internationally, Tehran has said publicly
that the West must acknowledge it has a role to play
in the region, especially after it helped America in
Iraq and Afghanistan, as the Iranian President himself
has already said against the backdrop of negotiations
around Iran's nuclear program. However, Tehran has
found itself reeling from the West's sanctions that
have been imposed, and those that will be imposed,
whether targeting the oil industry or the central
bank. The sanctions have led to the Iranian currency
being devalued by half. When Tehran threatened to
close the Strait of Hormuz, and threatened the Gulf
States, the international response came quickly, with
US President Barack Obama warning the Iranian Supreme
Leader, and ignoring [Iranian President] Ahmadinejad,
whilst American and European warships moved into the
waters of the Arabian Gulf, in a clear display of
strength. Despite all this, Tehran stood by idly and
simply received another blow in the same week. As for the Arab world, Saudi Arabia has taught Iran
a lesson in politics, and how to operate
professionally. The Arabs have agreed, unanimously, on
an Arab initiative similar to that proposed for Yemen,
primarily Saudi driven, which requires, at the end of
the day, the departure from power of one of Tehran's
allies, Bashar al-Assad. The Arab initiative will be
under the supervision of the Security Council, and it
has received an Arab consensus, even from Iraq, an
ally of Tehran, whilst Lebanon did not dare to object,
but rather used "fluid" diplomacy and announced that
it was distancing itself. Here it is important to tell the interesting story
of what took place at the Arab ministerial meeting in
Cairo. During that meeting, the Lebanese Foreign
Minister discussed every term of the new Arab
initiative towards Syria, and when it came to the
vote; the minister declared that he was distancing
himself, at which point Prince Saud al-Faisal said to
him: "Why waste our time by discussing each item when
you are abstaining from voting?" Sheikh Hamad bin
Jassim intervened by saying "he's not abstaining your
Highness, he's distancing himself", to which Prince
Saud replied "as well?!" The initiative itself is another blow to the
Iranian regime, again in the same week. This is not to
mention of course that Tehran has received another
blow in Iraq, where its ally, Nuri al-Maliki, has
become a lame duck, like the government of Hezbollah
in Lebanon. Thus we are now hearing about a meeting
between the Iranian Ambassador to Iraq and Iyad Allawi!
This of course is in addition to the case of Iran in
Bahrain. Thus, Iran's foolishness has caused it to receive
blow after blow, rather than receive any sort of deal.
We must remember that God does not gloat! Tariq Alhomayed is the Editor-in-Chief of Asharq
Al-Awsat, the youngest person to be appointed that
position. He holds a BA degree in Media studies from
King Abdul Aziz University in Jeddah, and has also
completed his Introductory courses towards a Master's
degree from George Washington University in Washington
D.C. He is based in London. Comments 💬 التعليقات |