If Morsi travels to Tehran at the end of this month, it becomes a defining moment in regional politics. One would like to be a fly on the wall if Morsi were to meet Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
by M. K. Bhadrakumar
Far from shying away in the face of the rise to power of the Muslim Brotherhood in North Africa, Iran has continued to reach out, in Tunisia, Libya and Egypt, in the name of Islam. Knowing that relations between the Brothers and Saudi Arabia have not always been on an even keel, Tehran has multiplied its initiatives to prevent the new North African governments from joining the Saudi Fitna game of fueling conflict between Sunnis and Shiites. Egypt is the centerpiece of this diplomacy. Ambassador Bhadrakumar analyzes the momentous repercussions of the current fence-mending efforts between Egypt and Iran.
This is a development that holds the potential to shake up Middle Eastern politics — Iranian vice-president visiting Cairo. The two countries pulled down the shutters following the Iranian revolution in 1979 and a dark period continued right till the end of the Hosni Mubarak era. The revolution on Tahrir Square one year ago heralded a thaw, the first sign of which was the permission granted to an Iranian warship to cross the Suez Canal to visit Syria.
Low-key contacts followed, including a meeting between the two foreign ministers on the sidelines of the NAM meeting in Bali, Indonesia in May last year. Iran pressed hard for the resumption of diplomatic ties. Egypt sought more time. Tehran didn’t press, either, comprehending the complexities of the Egyptian situation.
Meanwhile, the military junta permitted a second Iranian warship to cross the Suez Canal, disregarding the stern rebuke by the United States and Israel (and the annoyance of Saudi Arabia). On its part, evidently with the acquiescence of Cairo, Tehran began inviting a series of Egyptian goodwill delegations from the civil society in a sustained effort to reach out to the various sections — especially the Islamist forces — of Egyptian society.
To be sure, a critical mass of opinion began accruing in Egypt, including within the Muslim Brotherhood, regarding the restoration of normal ties with Iran.
Enter Saudi Arabia!
Everything is gonna be alright!
Taking advantage of the economic crisis in Egypt, Riyadh offered economic assistance, but with strings attached. The bottom line for the Saudis is that Egypt shouldn’t dilute Riyadh’s regional campaign to “isolate” Iran.
The main worry for the Saudis is that if Egypt, the biggest and most powerful Sunni Arab country, mends fences with Iran, the entire geopolitical thesis built around a contrived Sunni-Shi’ite sectarian schism which the US-Israeli-Saudi axis has been expounding as the centre-piece of the Arab Spring, would flounder. The stakes are indeed very high. Therefore, Saudi Arabia invited the newly-elected Mohammed Morsi of the Brotherhood to visit Riyadh last month. The Saudis hoped that Morsi would play footsie on the Sunni-Sh’ite front and get Egypt to play its due role in the Syrian crisis. But, reading between the lines, one is getting the impression that Saudis are pretty much unsure how to handle Morsi. Prominent Saudi commentators have been all along leveling harsh criticism at Morsi and the Brothers [1].
Even after the meeting between King Abdullah and Morsi last month, critical reportage is continuing in the Saudi establishment press [2], even pitting the Brothers against Egypt’s Al-Azhar in a clever ploy to divide the islamist camp in Egypt [3]. The point is, Riyadh has the utmost to fear from the Brothers — the spectre of the Brothers spearheading a ‘regime change’ in Saudi Arabia at some point haunts the Saudi rulers. The equations between the Saudis and the Brothers have been a troubled and often-violent one with the former Crown Prince Nayef using brutal methods to smash up the activities of the Brothers on Saudi soil.
This is where an Egyptian-Iranian rapprochement at this point becomes a major setback for the Saudi regime. If the Iranian news report carried by Fars is to be believed, Iranian vice-president Hamid Baqayee may visit Cairo to personally hand over the letter of invitation from President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad to Morsi to attend the forthcoming NAM summit meeting in Tehran.
In their first telephone conversation, Ahmadinejad invited Egypt’s first democratically-elected President Mohamed Morsi to participate in the forthcoming 16th Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) summit in the Iranian capital, Tehran. “Your presence as the current head of the Non-Aligned Movement at Tehran’s summit would be effective in advancing negotiations and ratifications,” Ahmadinejad said.
To be sure, an engrossing chapter is opening in the chronicle of the Arab Spring. Iran has throughout maintained that the Arab Spring will inevitably work in its favor in political terms.
From Tehran’s viewpoint, Islamism is a common bond that will ultimately tie Iran with the democratic regimes that emerge in the Arab world led by Islamist parties — be it Tunisia, Libya or Yemen — as time passes, no matter the manipulations by third parties.
That is to say, Iranians estimate that these Arab Spring regimes will come under compulsion sooner rather than later to pay heed to the popular opinion on the so-called Arab Street, which will favor pan-Islamic policies, since the Arab will see through the politics of sectarianism that the West and its regional allies like Saudi Arabia and Israel have propagated in the interests of their self-preservation or for the perpetuation of their hegemony over the Muslim Middle East. The Iranians are of course taking a longterm perspective in terms of the social and political forces being unleashed by the Arab Spring in the stagnant Arab world.
This is where Egypt’s stance becomes crucial. Egypt is the heart of the Arab world and it is manifestly aspiring to reclaim the role it lost in the period since the Camp David Accord in 1979 to the Saudis. All three protagonists — Saudi Arabia, Iran and Egypt — know that Riyadh conclusively loses the ideological war if Cairo refuses to play sectarian politics in the Muslim Middle East, and Tehran will then be a net gainer.
If Morsi travels to Tehran at the end of this month, it becomes a defining moment in regional politics. One would like to be a fly on the wall if Morsi were to meet Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei [4].
Ambassador M. K. Bhadrakumar is the former Indian Ambassador to Pakistan, Iran, Turkey and Russia, amongst other countries.
He is a specialist in Afghanistan and Pakistan affairs, and writes on energy and security issues for publications including The Hindu and Asia Online.
Source: Indian Punchline
[1] "Mursi and his clan", by Adel Al Toraifi, Asharq Al-Awsat, 27 June 2012.
[2] "Mursi and Al-Azhar on a collision course", by Waleed Abdul Rahman, Asharq Al-Awsat, 31 July 2012.
[3] Al-Azhar is Egypt’s religious establishment.
[4] "Iranian VP to Visit Cairo", Fars News Agency, 6 August 2012.







I hope Mr. Morsi builds proper relations with Iran …World needs Unity of people from 4 corners against destruction of International Zionism… peter czech
I agree completly, and I sincerely hope that all the parties involved is aware of this moment. Some of us have waited for Years for this moment, and never mind the past, forgett it, deal with it because the implications and the prospects of the future sould be overshaddowing what ever differences there have been, All parties have the possebility to become historical, for the most important issue is the Unification of the Islamic faith and the people in Arabic lands. They can change this game, and change the policys that is killing innocents everywhere, by reasons unimaginable, faith perverted into hate, marginalizations, worshiping polarization and lies. Wars driven by corrupt and alien forces, relying in greeed and forged history. The divertion suites only the powers that benefits from the iron grip on recourses and religion, reality and people. Look to the benefits of unifications, and now when the great war is emerging from the shadows, this may trun everything around, for the benefitt of us all, not only the followers of Muhammed(pbuh). peace “The things you do for yourself are gone when you are gone, but the things you do for others remain as your legacy.” ? Kalu Kalu
Alot of ppl in the alternative media are lumping al qaeda(myth) and the MB together as one evil islamic group. Even though everything al qaeda has done has never benfited muslims but rather zionist interests. I alway saw the MB as a pragmatic group and i saw the egyptian MB more genuine than the syrian MB, yesterday the egyptian MB made me happy when they came out yesterday and exposed israel's role in the border terrorist attack those who think their involved in israel's plan for the ME better think again. But what is for sure israel will use the excuse of a islamic egypt to try and further her borders.