Saudi Arabia Says Lebanon Has Declared War Against It

November 07, 2017

The resignation on Saturday of Lebanese Saudi-allied Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri has stepped up Saudi Arabia and Iran's regional power struggle. With Iran-backed Sunni group Hezbollah seeking to gain from Lebanon's political instability, Saudi Arabia responded on Monday by claiming that the new Lebanese powers that be had declared war on the oil-rich kingdom. In an interview with Saudi state television, Riyadh's Gulf affairs minister, Thamer al-Sabhan, said the Lebanese government would "be dealt with as a government declaring war on Saudi Arabia."

Hezbollah's acts of "aggression," Sabhan added, "were considered acts of a declaration of war against Saudi Arabia by Lebanon and by the Lebanese Party of the Devil." The alleged declaration comes after Hariri, a Sunni ally of Riyadh who holds both Saudi and Lebanese citizenship, claimed that there had been an assassination plot against him in Lebanon, forcing him to flee to Saudi Arabia, from where he announced his resignation in a broadcast from Saudi Arabia. While the exact motive behind his resignation remained unclear, the move toppled Lebanon's factious coalition government, which also included Hezbollah, and plunged the country into a political crisis. It also brought Lebanon back to the forefront of Iran and Saudi Arabia's regional rivalry, which has played out in Syria, Iraq, Bahrain and Yemen.

Region on edge following Houthi rebels missile attack on Riyadh

Riyadh and Tehran's strife was once again laid bare on Monday, as the two powers traded fierce accusations over last weekend's attempted missile attack on the Saudi capital, which is believed to have been fired by Yemen's Houthi rebel group. The Saudi-led military coalition, which is combating the Iran-backed rebel faction in Yemen, said that it reserved the "right to respond" after Saudi forces on Saturday intercepted a ballistic near Riyadh's international airport.  The Saudi-led military coalition called the attempted strike a "blatant military aggression by the Iranian regime which may amount to an act of war," while Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir warned on Twitter that "Iranian interventions in the region are detrimental to the security of neighboring countries and affect international peace and security."

Tehran in turn responded by accusing its regional rival of "war crimes, regional bullying, destabilizing behavior." Meanwhile, Iran's foreign ministry spokesman Bahram Ghassemi was quoted of saying that Saturday's missile attack was an "an independent action in response to (Saudi) aggression," and that Iran had nothing to do with it. Saudi Arabia has been accused of not doing enough to prevent civilian deaths in its war against the Houthi rebel group in Yemen. Since the intervention began in 2015, almost 8,700 people have been killed.

Courtesy:DW