Mursi never made overtures to Iran: aide
DUBAI/CAIRO, Jun 26 (bdnews24.com/Reuters) - An Iranian news agency said
Egypt's Islamist President-elect Mohamed Mursi had voiced interest in
restoring long-severed ties with Tehran to create a strategic "balance"
in the region, but a Mursi aide denied the interview ever took place.
Iran's
Fars agency said it spoke to Mursi a few hours before Sunday's election
results were announced and quoted him saying the two countries should
get closer - comments that go counter to Western efforts to isolate
Tehran over its nuclear programme.
"We must restore normal
relations with Iran based on shared interests, and expand areas of
political coordination and economic cooperation because this will create
a balance of pressure in the region," the semi-official news agency
quoted Mursi as saying in a transcript of the interview.
Yasser
Ali, a Mursi aide, told Reuters: "There was never a meeting with the
Iranian news agency Fars and what was taken as statements has no basis
in truth".
On its web page, Fars published a transcript and
an audio of the conversation. Reuters was unable to verify the
recording but the man purported to be Mursi did not sound exactly like
him.
Fars said it had asked Mursi whether, if elected, his
first state visit would be to Riyadh, to which he replied: "I didn't say
such a thing and until now my first international visits following my
victory in the elections have not been determined".
Rivalry
between Sunni Muslim Saudi Arabia and Shi'ite Iran has been intensified
by last year's "Arab Spring" revolts, which have altered political
certainties in the Middle East and left the powerful Gulf neighbours
vying for influence.
Since Egypt's Hosni Mubarak was
toppled in one of those uprisings, both Cairo and Tehran have signalled
interest in renewing ties severed more than 30 years ago.
Mursi,
however, striving to reassure Egypt's western allies wary at the
prospect of Islamist rule, is unlikely to stage major foreign policy
reversals so early in his rule.
"STRENGTHENING FRIENDSHIP"
In a message to Mursi on Monday, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad congratulated him for winning the vote.
"I
emphasise expanding bilateral ties and strengthening the friendship
between the two nations," Ahmadinejad wrote, according to state
television.
Iran has hailed Mursi's victory over former
general Ahmed Shafik in Egypt's first free presidential election as a
"splendid vision of democracy" that marked the country's "Islamic
Awakening" - a phrase Iranian politicians use to describe the events of
the "Arab Spring" and its aftermath.
When asked about the
possibility of Cairo and Tehran restoring relations, White House
spokesman Jay Carney stressed Egypt's vital role in the region.
"It
is perfectly appropriate for a nation like Egypt to have relations with
its neighbors, but again we look to Egypt to continue its significant
role as a pillar of regional peace and stability," Carney said aboard
Air Force One as President Barack Obama flew to New Hampshire.
Western
diplomats say in reality Egypt has little real appetite to change
relations with Iran significantly, given the substantial issues the new
president already has to face in cementing relations with regional and
global powers.
"Iran is hoping for Egypt to become a
deterrent against an Israeli attack as well as a regional player that
Iran can use as a potential counter-balance against Turkey and Saudi
Arabia," said a diplomat based in Tehran.
"Egypt, at least under present circumstances, would side with either of these against Iran."
CAMP DAVID REVIEW
In
what looked like a reversal of comments Mursi made in a televised
address after his victory was announced on Sunday, Fars news quoted him
as saying Egypt's Camp David peace accord with Israel "will be
reviewed", without elaborating.
The peace treaty remains a
lynchpin of US Middle East policy and, despite its unpopularity with
many Egyptians, was staunchly upheld by Mubarak, who suppressed the
Muslim Brotherhood movement to which Mursi belongs.
The
Sunni Brotherhood, whose Palestinian offshoot Hamas rules the Gaza
Strip, is vehemently critical of Israel, which has watched the rise of
Islamists and political upheaval in neighbouring Egypt with growing
concern.
Egypt's formal recognition of Israel and Iran's
1979 Islamic Revolution led in 1980 to the breakdown of diplomatic
relations between the two countries, among the biggest and most
influential in the Middle East. They currently have reciprocal interest
sections, but not at ambassadorial level.
Egypt's foreign
minister said last year that Cairo was ready to re-establish diplomatic
relations with Iran, which has hailed most Arab Spring uprisings as
anti-Western rebellions inspired by its own Islamic Revolution.
But
Iran has steadfastly supported Syrian President Bashar al-Assad,
Tehran's closest Arab ally, who is grappling with a revolt against his
rule, and at home has continued to reject demands for reform, which
spilled onto the street following the disputed re-election of
Ahmadinejad in 2009.
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