Iran Urges Arabs to Eject U.S. Military
A C-130 Hercules at Balad Air Base in Iraq
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates -- Iran's top national security official urged his Arab neighbors Tuesday to eject the U.S. military from American bases in the region and instead join Tehran in a regional security alliance.
Ali Larijani told Arab leaders attending a conference here that Washington is indifferent to their interests and will cast them aside as soon as they are no longer useful.
"The security and stability of the region needs to be attained and we should do it inside the region, not through bringing in foreign forces," Larijani told an audience of business and political leaders from the Arab world and elsewhere, including the United States. "We should stand on our own feet."
The speech was one of the most explicit expressions yet of rising Iranian assertiveness in its contest with the United States for influence in the region.
Many Sunni Arab countries, such as Saudi Arabia, have expressed misgivings about the growing influence of the Persian Shiite-dominated government in Tehran, which once sought to export its Islamic revolution and topple neighboring governments.
Read the rest at the Washington Post
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DUBAI, United Arab Emirates -- Iran's top national security official urged his Arab neighbors Tuesday to eject the U.S. military from American bases in the region and instead join Tehran in a regional security alliance.
Ali Larijani told Arab leaders attending a conference here that Washington is indifferent to their interests and will cast them aside as soon as they are no longer useful.
"The security and stability of the region needs to be attained and we should do it inside the region, not through bringing in foreign forces," Larijani told an audience of business and political leaders from the Arab world and elsewhere, including the United States. "We should stand on our own feet."
The speech was one of the most explicit expressions yet of rising Iranian assertiveness in its contest with the United States for influence in the region.
Many Sunni Arab countries, such as Saudi Arabia, have expressed misgivings about the growing influence of the Persian Shiite-dominated government in Tehran, which once sought to export its Islamic revolution and topple neighboring governments.
Read the rest at the Washington Post
Related Link:
Analysis: Saudis Work to Curb Iran's Influence
Related Link:
Saudi denies it may back Sunnis in Iraq
Related Link:
Iraqi president says security deal reached with Iran
Related Link:
Iraqi President Seeks Iran's Help
Related Link:
Iran invites Iraqi, Syrian presidents to Tehran
Related Link:
Rice cool to talks with Iran, Syria
Related Link:
Blair Urges U.S. to Seek Help From Syria and Iran
Related Link:
Bush urges Iran, Syria aid Iraq, Lebanon
Related Link:
U.S. blames Iran, Syria for Iraq violence
Related Link:
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