Iranian, Syrian leaders brush aside US calls

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“I am surprised by their call to keep a distance between the countries … when they raise the issue of stability and peace in the Middle East, and all the other beautiful principles,” Syrian President Bashar Al Assad told a news conference in Damascus with his Iranian counterpart, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. “We need to further reinforce relations if the true objective is stability. We do not want others to give us lessons on our region, our history,” the Syrian leader said.

Ahmadinejad, who flew in to Damascus earlier in the day and later met exiled Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal, stressed that ties between the two Muslim states, both outspoken critics of US ally Israel, were as “solid” as ever. “Nothing can damage these relations,” he said.

On the same day in Jerusalem, the United States and Israel resumed an annual “strategic dialogue” for the first time since US President Barack Obama assumed office in 2009, with Iran prominent on the agenda. US Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg met Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon.

Ahmadinejad, meanwhile, renewed his prediction that Israel was “on the path to disappearing,” echoing several past controversial forecasts that the Jewish state would be “wiped off the map” that stirred outrage in the West.

“If the Zionist entity wants to repeat its past errors, its death will be inevitable,” the Iranian president said. Assad said his country was always on the alert against Israel. “We are always preparing ourselves for an Israeli aggression whether it is small or big scale,” he said.

Afterwards, Ahmadinejad met Meshaal and other Palestinian leaders critical of the peace process for talks focused on “the Israeli threats made against Syria, Iran, the Palestinians and Lebanon,” a participant in the meeting said.

Ahmadinejad told the Palestinian leaders that “Iran places itself solidly beside the Palestinian people, until their land is liberated,” the participant said, and that resistance was the “likeliest path to liberation.”

On Wednesday, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Washington has been pressing Damascus to move away from Tehran.

Questioned on Clinton, Assad adopted an ironic tone.

“We met today to sign a ‘separation accord’ between Syria and Iran, but because of a bad translation we ended up signing an accord on scrapping visas,” he quipped.

Assad said the agreement would serve “to further reinforce relations in all fields and at all levels” between the two countries, which have been close allies for the past three decades.

In the face of US-led efforts to slap new sanctions on the Islamic republic over its controversial nuclear programme, he also defended Iran’s right to pursue uranium enrichment.

“To forbid an independent state the right to enrichment amounts to a new colonialist process in the region,” he said.

The visit came after Foreign Minister Walid Muallem said Syria was determined to help Iran and the West engage in a “constructive” dialogue over Tehran’s nuclear programme.

Western governments suspect that the programme in Iran is cover for a drive to produce a bomb. Tehran vehemently denies the allegation. On the eve of Ahmadinejad’s visit, Clinton was blunter than ever about Washington’s bid to drive a wedge between Syria and Iran.

Testifying in the Senate, she said William Burns, the third-ranking US diplomat, “had very intense, substantive talks in Damascus” last week on what was the highest-level US mission to the Syrian capital in five years.

Syria is being asked “generally to begin to move away from the relationship with Iran, which is so deeply troubling to the region as well as to the United States,” Clinton said

 

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