Iran Standoff headed For Confrontation: Saudis

by phrolen | September 27, 2007 at 03:49 pm | 418 views | add comment

    Saudi Arabian foreign minister Saud Al Faisal expressed concern on thursday that Iran's standoff with western powers over it's nuclear program was headed toward a "Confrontation." Western powers claim that Iran is running a secret nuclear weapons program, a claim which Iran denies, however, Iranian leaders have become increasingly beligerent in their public dialogue, and have refused to adhere to the transparency called for in recent UN resolutions. Prince Saud toughened previous Saudi stances and stated that it was the position of his government that Iran hd to prove that its program was peaceful. "We hope that, if anything, that this will be settled through negotiations.' "The region is volitile and a conflict in that region is the most dangerous thing to concieve and therefore we hope that it can be solved diplomatically." Saudi Arabia is the latest nation to signal that the Iranian debackle could be headed toward conflict; France, Poland, and other European nations have stated such in recent weeks.

 

Saudi Arabia's foreign minister said here Wednesday that Iran's standoff with Western powers over its nuclear program is heading toward a "confrontation."

Saudi Prince Saud al-Faisal met in New York with other Gulf foreign ministers as well as the chief diplomats of Jordan and Egypt, and US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.

"We talked certainly about Iran with the Secretary Rice," Prince Saud told reporters.

"Definitely what we are seeing is a confrontation in the making," the prince said.

"And we have pressed in our mutual discussions with the Iranians the question on them: 'Why such a precipitous move toward confrontation, what is your intent in this?' And their answer was that they are not looking for confrontation or building nuclear weapons."

He said Saudi Arabia is "very concerned" about Iran's nuclear program, which Western powers charge is a cover for building an atomic bomb. Tehran rejects the charge, saying it only seeks to produce energy.

Prince Saud said Tehran must prove its program is peaceful.

"We hope that, if anything, that this will be settled through negotiations," he said. "The region is volatile and a conflict in that region is the most dangerous thing to conceive and therefore we hope it can be solved diplomatically."

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September 27, 2007 at 03:49 pm by phrolen, 418 views, add comment

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