Gulf allies want Trump to prolong US bombardment of Iran, officials say
A plume of smoke rises from the site of a strike in Iran, Tehran, on Sunday.
Photo: Xinhua Gulf allies of the United States, led by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, are urging President Donald Trump to continue prosecuting the war against Iran, arguing that Tehran has not been weakened enough by the month-long US-led bombing campaign, according to US, Gulf and Israeli officials.
After private grumbling at the start of the war that they were not given adequate advance notice of the US-Israeli attack and complaining the US had ignored their warnings that the war would have devastating consequences for the entire region, some of the regional allies are making the case to the White House that the moment offers a historic opportunity to cripple Tehran’s clerical rule once and for all.
Officials from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait and Bahrain have conveyed in private conversations that they do not want the military operation to end until there are significant changes in the Iranian leadership or there’s a dramatic shift in Iranian behaviour, according to the officials, who were not authorised to comment publicly and spoke on the condition of anonymity.
The push from the Gulf nations comes as Trump vacillates between claiming that Iran’s decimated leadership is ready to settle the conflict and threatening to further escalate the war if a deal is not reached soon.
All the while, Trump is struggling to rally public support at home for a war that has left more than 3,000 dead across the Middle East and is shaking the global economy.
Yet the US leader is sounding increasingly confident that he has the full support of his most important Middle East allies, including some that were hesitant about a new military campaign in the lead-up to the war. “Saudi Arabia’s fighting back hard.
Qatar is fighting back.
UAE is fighting back.
Kuwait’s fighting back.
Bahrain’s fighting back,” Trump told reporters on Air Force One on Sunday evening as he made his way to Washington from his home in Florida. “They’re all fighting back.” The Gulf countries host US forces and bases from which the US has launched strikes on Iran, but have not joined the offensive strikes.
While regional leaders are broadly supportive now of the US efforts, one Gulf diplomat described some division, with Saudi Arabia and the UAE leading the calls for increasing military pressure on Tehran.
The UAE has emerged as perhaps the most hawkish of the Gulf countries and is pushing hard for Trump
原文链接: 南华早报
