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Saudi allies Bahrain and Sudan cut ties with Tehran as regional crisis deepens | |
(about 3 hours later) | |
BEIRUT — Bahrain and Sudan joined Saudi Arabia in severing diplomatic relations with Iran on Monday as the worst crisis in three decades between the region’s rival Sunni and Shiite powers drew worldwide expressions of alarm. | BEIRUT — Bahrain and Sudan joined Saudi Arabia in severing diplomatic relations with Iran on Monday as the worst crisis in three decades between the region’s rival Sunni and Shiite powers drew worldwide expressions of alarm. |
The United Arab Emirates, meanwhile, recalled its ambassador from Tehran in a downgrading of ties to focus mainly on commercial affairs. Dubai is the base for many Iranian-run businesses. | |
As the diplomatic storm widened, so did the efforts at international damage control. | |
Russia offered to mediate, the United Nations dispatched a senior envoy for crisis talks in Riyadh and Tehran, and a growing list of nations expressed concern at the implications of the rupture — touched off by Saudi Arabia’s execution of a prominent Shiite cleric as part of its largest mass execution of prisoners in more than 35 years. | |
[ Wall Street follows global market slump] | |
Iran said Saudi Arabia made a “strategic mistake” that could only further divide the region and fuel militancy during crucial battles against the Islamic State and efforts to end Syria’s civil war. | |
In further signs of spillover: sectarian violence flared in Iraq, police clashed with protesters in Bahrain, and financial markets dropped sharply. | |
The Persian Gulf nation of Bahrain — a close Saudi ally and home to the U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet — ordered Iranian diplomats to leave within 48 hours. Sudan said it also was severing diplomatic ties with Iran, which had sought to improve relations with Sudan in recent years to make it an economic and military foothold in Africa. | |
The moves could boost pressure on other Saudi allies around the region to take diplomatic action against Iran. Already, security forces around the region were on higher alert. | |
In Bahrain, police fired tear Monday at mainly Shiite protesters denouncing Saudi Arabia’s execution of the cleric, Nimr Baqr al-Nimr, on Saturday, news agencies reported. In 2011, Saudi Arabia sent troops into the island nation to back the Sunni rulers seeking to crush a Shiite-led uprising demanding a greater voice in the country’s affairs. | |
[Could impasse complicate fight against the Islamic State?] | [Could impasse complicate fight against the Islamic State?] |
Global financial markets were roiled by the deepening tensions between the OPEC giants. U.S. stocks opened sharply lower Monday, and Asian markets plunged on a mix of worries over the Middle East impasse and weak Chinese manufacturing data. Oil prices seesawed amid the uncertainty. | |
Underscoring the worries, the United Nations pulled its chief envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura, away from that conflict for a round of talks with Saudi and Iranian officials. De Mistura is expected in Riyadh on Monday and will travel to Tehran later in the week, said U.N. deputy spokesman Farhan Haq. | |
In Washington, White House press secretary Josh Earnest urged Iran and Saudi Arabia “to show restraint and not further inflame tensions that are on quite vivid display in the region.” He told reporters that “all sides” could do more to bridge sectarian divides. | |
Asked if the rift could harm efforts to reach a political solution in Syria, Earnest said, “We’re hopeful that it won’t.” He said a reason for optimism was that “it is so clearly in the interest of both countries to advance a political solution” in Syria. | |
Earnest said Secretary of State John F. Kerry has been in contact with his counterparts in the region but that President Obama has not made calls to fellow leaders in recent days. | |
In explaining its decision to expel Iranian diplomats, Saudi Arabia cited “hostile” comments by Iran after the execution of Nimr on Saturday, as well as the subsequent attack on its embassy in Tehran. | |
[In legacy of a revered martyr, Saudi Shiites find sustenance] | |
Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubair told reporters in Riyadh late Sunday that the diplomats were given 48 hours to leave the country. But Saudi diplomats had already departed Iran after angry crowds ransacked and burned the Saudi Embassy in Tehran overnight Saturday, in retaliation for the execution of Nimr. | |
As part of the diplomatic freeze, Saudi Arabia halted air traffic between the two countries, the Saudi civil aviation agency said. It was unclear how the decision could affect special flights for Iranian pilgrims seeking to visit Islam’s holiest sites, but Jubair told the Reuters news agency that Iranians were still welcome for the annual hajj and other pilgrimages. | |
Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian suggested that Saudi Arabia had engineered the diplomatic break to eclipse the “strategic mistake” it made by executing Nimr. He accused the kingdom of “hasty and ill-considered approaches” that would only advance extremism and terrorism. | |
[Iran-Saudi suspicions spill over to hajj pilgrimage] | [Iran-Saudi suspicions spill over to hajj pilgrimage] |
The rupture sets the region’s two biggest powerhouses on a collision course at a critical time for U.S.-led diplomacy in the Middle East, and it raised the specter of worsening violence in the countries where they back rival factions, such as Iraq, Yemen and Syria. | The rupture sets the region’s two biggest powerhouses on a collision course at a critical time for U.S.-led diplomacy in the Middle East, and it raised the specter of worsening violence in the countries where they back rival factions, such as Iraq, Yemen and Syria. |
Iraq’s Interior Ministry said three Sunni mosques were attacked with bombs overnight in the Shiite majority province of Babil south of Baghdad, in one sign of the rising tensions. There were no casualties because they were empty at the time. | Iraq’s Interior Ministry said three Sunni mosques were attacked with bombs overnight in the Shiite majority province of Babil south of Baghdad, in one sign of the rising tensions. There were no casualties because they were empty at the time. |
Despite their countless international feuds, it was the first time since a two-year break in 1988-1990 that diplomatic relations between Iran and Saudi Arabia had formally been severed, according to Abdullah al-Shamri, a Saudi analyst and former diplomat. | Despite their countless international feuds, it was the first time since a two-year break in 1988-1990 that diplomatic relations between Iran and Saudi Arabia had formally been severed, according to Abdullah al-Shamri, a Saudi analyst and former diplomat. |
China was among the countries expressing concern at the meltdown, urging the two parties “to maintain calm and restraint,” and Russia has offered its services as a mediator, according to Russian news agencies. | China was among the countries expressing concern at the meltdown, urging the two parties “to maintain calm and restraint,” and Russia has offered its services as a mediator, according to Russian news agencies. |
[Nuclear deal with Tehran was hard sell in Riyadh] | [Nuclear deal with Tehran was hard sell in Riyadh] |
Nimr was among 47 people put to death on the biggest single day of executions in Saudi Arabia since 1980, but he was only one of four Shiite Muslims among the group — and by far the best known. Most of the others were Sunnis accused of carrying out a spate of attacks linked to al-Qaeda over a decade ago. | Nimr was among 47 people put to death on the biggest single day of executions in Saudi Arabia since 1980, but he was only one of four Shiite Muslims among the group — and by far the best known. Most of the others were Sunnis accused of carrying out a spate of attacks linked to al-Qaeda over a decade ago. |
Nimr’s role as a leader in the anti-government protests that swept the Shiite eastern regions of Saudi Arabia nearly five years ago ensured both that his death sentence would be carried out, and that there would be an enraged response from Shiites across the region. | Nimr’s role as a leader in the anti-government protests that swept the Shiite eastern regions of Saudi Arabia nearly five years ago ensured both that his death sentence would be carried out, and that there would be an enraged response from Shiites across the region. |
In tough comments Sunday, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, predicted “divine retribution” for Nimr’s executioners, saying that the execution “will cause serious troubles for the politicians of this [Saudi] regime in a very short time.” | In tough comments Sunday, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, predicted “divine retribution” for Nimr’s executioners, saying that the execution “will cause serious troubles for the politicians of this [Saudi] regime in a very short time.” |
Saudi Arabia responded with an angry statement pointing out that Iran is often accused by the international community of supporting terrorism and of executing large numbers of people. | Saudi Arabia responded with an angry statement pointing out that Iran is often accused by the international community of supporting terrorism and of executing large numbers of people. |
[What Saudi Arabia is doing — and not doing — to battle the Islamic State] | [What Saudi Arabia is doing — and not doing — to battle the Islamic State] |
But the furor went deeper than the execution of a single cleric, striking at the heart of the Saudi-Iranian rivalry that has fueled, though not caused, much of the conflict engulfing the region. | But the furor went deeper than the execution of a single cleric, striking at the heart of the Saudi-Iranian rivalry that has fueled, though not caused, much of the conflict engulfing the region. |
Encouraged by Washington and by the regional realignment underway in the wake of a deal in July to limit Iran’s nuclear program, the two rivals had been tentatively exploring closer ties. It is unclear whether Saudi Arabia intended such a rupture when it carried out the death penalty against Nimr. | Encouraged by Washington and by the regional realignment underway in the wake of a deal in July to limit Iran’s nuclear program, the two rivals had been tentatively exploring closer ties. It is unclear whether Saudi Arabia intended such a rupture when it carried out the death penalty against Nimr. |
The execution was in keeping with a newly aggressive stance adopted by King Salman, who has worn the crown for a little less than a year since the death of his half-brother, Abdullah. It sent a powerful message that Saudi Arabia is intent on standing up to its regional rival, said Theodore Karasik of Gulf State Analytics, a consulting group. | The execution was in keeping with a newly aggressive stance adopted by King Salman, who has worn the crown for a little less than a year since the death of his half-brother, Abdullah. It sent a powerful message that Saudi Arabia is intent on standing up to its regional rival, said Theodore Karasik of Gulf State Analytics, a consulting group. |
“The Saudis hope to demonstrate that they are on the offensive in terms of the Sunni-Shiite divide, and they have just upped the ante on that significantly,” he said. | “The Saudis hope to demonstrate that they are on the offensive in terms of the Sunni-Shiite divide, and they have just upped the ante on that significantly,” he said. |
David Nakamura and Brian Murphy in Washington contributed to this report. | |
Read more: | Read more: |
Ali al-Nimr was a boy when thrown in Saudi prison | Ali al-Nimr was a boy when thrown in Saudi prison |
Ali al-Namr’s mother urged President Obama to ‘rescue’ her son | Ali al-Namr’s mother urged President Obama to ‘rescue’ her son |
Shiite protests pose major challenge for Saudi Arabia | Shiite protests pose major challenge for Saudi Arabia |