According to media reports Saudi Arabia has given a green
light to Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi to arrange a meeting with Iran
as a first step towards deescalating tensions in the region.
Abbas al-Hasnawi, an official in the prime minister’s
office, informed that Abdul Mahdi was mediating between the leaderships in
Riyadh and Tehran and had communicated each side’s conditions for talks to the
other.
The remarks came after Iranian government spokesman Ali
Rabiei said Saudi Arabia had sent messages to Iranian President Hassan Rouhani
via the leaders of some countries.
Hasnawi confirmed that Abdul Mahdi was acting as a mediator with
the aim of easing tensions after Iran was alleged for September 14 attacks on
Saudi oil facilities.
“The Iraqi leadership has channels with both sides. Our
Sunni brothers [in the government] liaise with the Saudis and our Shia brothers
with the Iranians,” he said.
“The Saudis have conditions before the negotiations process
starts and the same with Iranians. We have liaised these conditions to each
side. It is not an easy task to get together two opposite sides in terms of
their ideology, sect and their alliances in the region.”
Earlier, the Iraqi prime minister had said he believed Saudi
Arabia was looking to deescalate tensions with Iran.
In an interview with Al Jazeera, he said that it is in
everybody’s interest to prevent further war in the region.
“Nobody possesses the weapons necessary to deal their
adversary a fatal blow. Chaos and destruction will hit the region in its
entirety,” he said.
“Everybody is open to dialogue,” he said. “Iran says [it is]
willing to negotiate if sanctions are lifted; the U.S. [also] asks for dialogue
... neither does Saudi Arabia close the door for dialogue,” Abdul Hadi added.
“There are many countries, and Iraq is one of them, that can
offer a solution or a place for a solution to be found.”
In an interview with the CBS program “60 Minutes” broadcast,
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman said he preferred a political resolution
rather than a military one to the issues with Iran.
A war with Iran would lead to “a total collapse of the
global economy”, he said, as he called for a political solution and backed
talks between US President Donald Trump and Iran’s leaders.
“The political and peaceful solution is much better than the
military one,” he added.
Iranian Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani welcomed the Saudi
crown prince’s willingness to resolve disputes with Tehran through talks,
saying Iran’s doors are open to the Saudis.
Larijani said if Iran and Saudi Arabia hold talks, many of
the region’s security and political problems would be resolved.
“We want to create a security system in the Persian Gulf
with cooperation of all Persian Gulf states,” said Larijani.
Tensions in the Persian Gulf have heightened following the
attack on Saudi oil fields, for which Riyadh and their Western allies,
especially the US blamed Iran.
Iran has rejected the claim that it is behind the attack on
the Saudi oil sites, calling it a “great deceit” in line with “great pressure”
campaign on the Islamic Republic.
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said last
month that “even the Saudis themselves don't believe the fiction of Iranian
involvement” in the attacks on the Aramco oil facilities.