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Tuesday April 23, 2024

Gulf tensions: Regional rivals don’t need advice, says Putin

By News Desk
October 14, 2019


RIYADH: Russia can play a positive role in easing tensions in the Gulf but the region’s rival leaders don’t need advice and mediation – you can only talk to them out of friendship, said President Vladimir Putin in comments published on Sunday before his first visit to Saudi Arabia in over a decade.

He cited good Russian ties with Gulf Arab states and Iran in an interview with Arab broadcasters, but said he had no reliable information about who was behind attacks on Saudi oil facilities on September 14 which stoked tension and rattled oil markets.

“It is wrong to determine who is guilty before it is known reliably and clearly who is behind this act,” Putin said, adding that he had agreed to help investigate, says a UK-based news agency.

“Imagine, we don’t know. The next day, I asked the head of the foreign intelligence service and the defense minister. ‘No, we don’t know’,” he said according to an Arabic-language transcript provided by Saudi-owned Al Arabiya television.

Putin is due to arrive in Saudi Arabia on Monday (today) and will hold talks with King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman before leaving for the United Arab Emirates on Tuesday. Russia and Saudi Arabia are two of the world’s biggest oil producers.

Putin said such attacks strengthened cooperation between oil producers inside and outside OPEC, an alliance known as OPEC+, and that Russia - which is not in OPEC - would work with its partners to reduce attempts to destabilize markets.

Saudi Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Adel al-Jubeir, in a media briefing, said Riyadh was not behind a suspected strike against an Iranian-owned oil tanker in the Red Sea on Friday. Putin said the region’s rival leaders did not need advice and mediation. “You can only talk to them out of friendship,” he said. “I know that they, being smart, will listen and analyze what they are told. In thiscontext we can play a positive role.” Putin said he had “very friendly personal relations” with Crown Prince Mohammed.

Asked whether Moscow supported a return to negotiations with Iran to limit its missile program as Trump had called for or enforcing the nuclear deal first, Putin said the two issues should be dealt with separately.

“Most likely it (the missiles) can and should be discussed ... The missile programme is one thing and the nuclear program is another thing,” he said. “Of course, this is necessary, but there is no need to merge one with the other...”

On Syria, where Russia and Iran have been key allies of President Bashar al-Assad during the country’s civil war, Putin said any new constitution that is drawn up should guarantee the rights of all ethnic and religious groups.

A congress convened by Russia last year tasked the United Nations envoy for Syria with forming a committee to draft a new constitution, after many rounds of talks to end the war failed. UN officials say forming a constitutional committee is key to political reforms and new elections meant to unify Syria and end the civil war.

Putin said Syrians “interact positively” with Russian military police and military stationed in the country. To a question, Putin said Moscow did not blame Trump for not improving US-Russian relations, blaming the lack of progress on the “internal political agenda”.