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News ID: 106099
Publish Date : 23 August 2022 - 21:28

CNN: Arab States Woo Back Iran

ABU DHABI (Dispatches) – A lot has happened since Persian Gulf Arab states downgraded ties with Iran in January 2016 when an angry mob stormed the Saudi embassy in Tehran following the Saudi execution of a prominent Shia cleric.
Iran’s nuclear agreement with world powers came into effect that month, but the Trump administration withdrew from it just two years later, leading to a wave of tit-for-tat attacks that affected oil and shipping in the Persian Gulf.
As tensions grew, Persian Gulf states found the U.S. standing on the sidelines, either unwilling or unable to come to their rescue, with their own lines of communication with Iran all but severed.
But much has changed since then. The United Arab Emirates is set to restore top level diplomatic relations, saying on Sunday that its ambassador, Saif Muhammad Al Zaabi, would return to Tehran “in [the] coming days.” Kuwait returned its ambassador last week and Saudi Arabia, whose lead the Persian Gulf states followed in downgrading ties with Iran six years ago, is holding direct talks with the Islamic Republic.
“It’s obvious there is a regional direction that is in tandem with Saudi movement,” Muhammad Baharoon, director general of the Dubai Public Policy Research Centre, told CNN.
The decision to return the ambassador “comes within the UAE’s regional orientation towards restoring bridges, strengthening relations, maximizing on what we share and building on it to create an atmosphere of trust, understanding and cooperation,” tweeted Anwar Gargash, adviser to the UAE president.
Dina Esfandiary, a Middle East adviser at the International Crisis Group think tank, said Persian Gulf Arab states have developed a “pragmatic policy” on Iran that involves both containment and engagement “because they realized just one would not work on its own.”

She told CNN that, it had become imperative for the UAE “to secure itself without relying on others -- the U.S. in particular -- and engaging with Iran is a part of that.”
Ties between Abu Dhabi and Tehran have been progressively improving since then. The UAE is now the top exporter to Iran with bilateral trade rising to $21.4 billion in four months from March this year, from just $7 billion for all of 2019, according to Reuters.
“Financially and commercially, the UAE benefits the most from lessening regional tensions,” Abdulkhaleq Abdulla, a political science professor in the UAE, told CNN. “Even during the worst of political tensions between the two countries, trade was uninterrupted. It went down, but never stopped.”
The rapprochement comes amid uncertainty about the progress of indirect talks between the U.S. and Iran to restore the nuclear agreement.  
If the talks fail, observers say regional tensions could escalate as they did when then-U.S. President Donald Trump withdrew from the agreement, potentially dragging the region to war.  
Saudi Arabia and Bahrain are the only Persian Gulf Arab countries with no ambassador in Tehran.
Iran said on Monday that talks with Saudi Arabia were a separate matter from talks to revive the nuclear pact, adding that cooperation between Tehran and Riyadh could help restore calm and security in the Middle East.
The resumption of diplomatic ties is “not a silver bullet,” Baharoon said. “It is an important step, nonetheless. Diplomatic ties are lines of communication that help directly in reducing tension and dealing with it. [We] can’t have cooperation if we are not talking to each other.”