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NUKEWARS
Gulf states fear deal will boost Iran regional ambitions
by Staff Writers
Dubai (AFP) Nov 24, 2013


Israel-Iran relations: decades of hostility
Jerusalem (AFP) Nov 24, 2013 - Following is a chronology of Israel-Iran relations leading up to the signing of Sunday's Geneva accord on Tehran's nuclear programme, which was panned by the Jewish state.

-- 1948-1979: Close to Iran's shah, Israel maintains a key diplomatic mission in Tehran and imports 40 percent of its oil from Iran in exchange for weapons, technology and agricultural produce. Iran has the largest Jewish community in the Middle East.

-- 1979: Upon the establishment of the Islamic republic, Iran cuts all official ties with Israel, which it does not recognise. Israel becomes the "occupier" of Jerusalem, or the "enemy" committing a "genocide" of the Palestinians. Informal ties are maintained.

The militant Palestinian movement Islamic Jihad is formed under the auspices of the Iranian revolution, committed to an armed struggle and the annihilation of the Jewish state. Iran is its primary financial supporter.

-- 1980-1988: During the Iran-Iraq war, Israel serves as secret conduit for the US to ship some 1,500 missiles to Iran, with the profits going to aid rebels fighting a leftwing government in Nicaragua, in a scandal known as the "Iran-Contra affair."

-- June 1982: Israel invades Lebanon to stop Palestinian attacks into its territory. Iran's Revolutionary Guards form Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite movement that becomes the main militant group fighting the Israeli occupation.

-- December 1989: Washington reveals Israel bought Iranian oil in a transaction aimed at facilitating the release of Israeli soldiers and American hostages held in Lebanon.

-- March 1992-July 1994: Israel accuses Iran of a 1992 bombing of its embassy in Buenos Aires, which killed 22 people, and a 1994 bombing at a Jewish community centre in the city, which killed 85.

-- September 1993: Iran is one of the few countries in the world that rejects the Israeli-Palestinian Oslo accords.

-- July 2000: Israel, the region's sole if undeclared nuclear-armed state, estimates Iran will begin to have nuclear capabilities in 2005 and could develop bombs capable of reaching Israel within a decade.

-- December 2003: Tehran says Israel "would be digging its own grave" were it to attack Iran's nuclear facilities.

-- August 2005: Hardline Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says Israel should be wiped "from the page of time," calling the Holocaust a "myth" and Israel a "cancerous tumour."

-- July 18, 2012: A suicide bomber kills six in an attack in Bulgaria aimed at Israeli tourists, which Israel blames on Iran and its proxy Hezbollah.

-- September 27, 2012: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu draws a "clear red line" on a cartoon bomb representing Iran's nuclear programme during a UN speech.

-- October 1, 2013: Netanyahu criticises the world's warming to new Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, a reputed moderate, and reiterates Israel "will stand alone" if it must to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear arms.

-- November 24, 2013: World powers and Iran sign "historic" deal on nuclear programme, which Israel calls "bad."

Sunni-ruled Gulf monarchies feel let down by their US ally and want good relations with their Shiite neighbour Iran but also fear the Geneva nuclear deal will boost its regional ambitions, analysts say.

Saudi Arabia and the oil- and gas-rich nations of the Gulf were weighing their reactions on Sunday hours after the agreement was signed between Iran and Western powers.

Tehran agreed to curb its nuclear programme in the breakthrough interim deal that world powers claimed was the biggest step in decade-long efforts to deny Iran an atomic bomb.

But Gulf states have never made a secret of their concerns about Iranian regional ambitions.

"In principle, the Gulf states want good relations with Iran," Saudi analyst Jamal Khashoggi told AFP.

"But the (Geneva) agreement has reduced the Iran problem to the nuclear level only, while its regional interference is of key concern to these countries."

Khashoggi said Gulf states "fear Iran will see this accord as encouragement to act with a free hand in the region".

Tehran is a key backer of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, of the Shiite Alawite sect, in his fight against a nearly three-year insurrection.

The Islamic republic is also seen as feeding instability in Bahrain and Yemen through the Shiite communities there.

But President Barack Obama moved quickly to reassure US allies on Sunday, saying Washington "will remain firm, as will our commitment to our friends and allies -- particularly Israel and our Gulf partners, who have good reason to be sceptical about Iran's intentions."

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dismissed the nuclear agreement, calling it "not a historic agreement but rather a historic mistake".

He reiterated Israel's right to defend itself, and his hawkish foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman said "all options are on the table".

The Gulf states and Israel do not see eye-to-eye on Iran, said Khashoggi, adding that "the main problem of the Jewish state is (its own) nuclear" capability.

'Not negative, but not enough'

For Saudi analyst Anwar Eshki, head of the Jeddah-based Middle East Centre for Strategic and Legal Studies, the deal "is not negative, but it is not enough".

Under the Geneva agreement, Iran will limit its nuclear programme in exchange for $7 billion (5.2 billion euros) in sanctions relief.

Over the next six months, Iran and the United States, China, Russia, France, Britain and Germany are to negotiate a more comprehensive deal.

"We are worried," said Eshki, pointing to the $7 billion.

"We need to know whether these funds will be used by the Iranian regime for its own people, or to further finance crises in the region," he said, listing Gulf nations' grievances with Iran.

Tehran "stokes sectarian tensions between Sunnis and Shiites and fuels crisis-hit areas of the Arab world, in Syria, Lebanon and Yemen", in addition to its territorial dispute over Gulf islands with the United Arab Emirates.

Distrust of Iran among Gulf states is fed by the fear that their traditional protector and ally the United States has abandoned them.

Saudi Arabia, main backer of the Syrian opposition, took issue with Obama for not attacking Syria in September despite evidence the regime used chemical weapons against its own people, killing hundreds of civilians.

According to Khashoggi, officials in Gulf countries feel the Obama administration "is no longer interested in regional problems" in the Middle East.

This stand-off approach by Washington to the oil-producing region comes with the United States set to become the world's top oil producer by 2015, because of booming shale oil output.

"Countries in the region no longer have any confidence in the United States," said Emirati analyst Abdulkhaleq Abdullah.

For him, Washington "was over-zealous" in seeking to reach a speedy agreement with Iran's new president, Hassan Rouhani.

"But they (Gulf states) do retain confidence in other allies France and Germany," he said, noting that the deal is "good in that it was agreed between Iran and the international community, not Iran and the US".

Abdullah said Gulf nations "may end up being the main beneficiaries of this agreement as it should defuse tensions in the region".

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