Obama administration officials expressed deep concern on Sunday that the abrupt escalation of tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran could have repercussions extending to the fight against the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, the diplomatic efforts to end Syria's civil war, and wider efforts to bring stability to the Middle East.
Following Saudi Arabia's announcement that it was severing diplomatic ties with Tehran after mobs stormed the Saudi Embassy there late Saturday, the administration called on both sides to take a step back.
"We believe that diplomatic engagement and direct conversations remain essential in working through differences," State Department spokesman John Kirby said on Sunday. "We will continue to urge leaders across the region to take affirmative steps to calm tensions."
READ: Saudi Arabia cuts ties with Iran as row over cleric's death escalates
But the public call for calm papered over long-simmering disagreements over Iran and other matters between the United States and Saudi Arabia, its powerful Middle Eastern ally, and threatened a serious rupture.
Administration officials were privately critical of the Saudis for provoking the weekend's upheaval with the execution of Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr, a prominent Saudi Shiite cleric arrested two years ago and sentenced to death for fomenting dissent against the ruling Sunni royal family.
"This is a dangerous game they are playing," said a U.S. official who asked for anonymity to discuss U.S.-Saudi relations. "There are larger repercussions than just the reaction to these executions," including damage to "counter-ISIL initiatives as well as the Syrian peace process." ISIL and ISIS are alternative names for the Islamic State.
Saudi Arabia made clear that its concerns about U.S. dismay over the weekend's events were minor compared with its belief that the West was kowtowing to Shiite Iran on a range of issues.
"Enough is enough," said a person authorized to convey Saudi thinking on the condition of anonymity. "Tehran has thumbed its nose at the West again and again, continuing to sponsor terrorism and launch ballistic missiles, and no one is doing anything about it."
"Every time the Iranians do something, the United States backs off. The Saudis are actually doing something," the person said.
"We are determined not to allow Iran to undermine our security," Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir said at a news conference in Riyadh on Sunday. "We are determined not to let Iran mobilize or create or establish terrorist cells in our country or in the countries of our allies. We will push back against Iran's attempts to do so. "
Although Saudi Arabia and the United States have long found common cause in antiterrorism campaigns and in promoting regional stability, strains have emerged regularly since the Sept. 11, 2001, al-Qaeda attacks. The two have frequently disagreed about how to respond to the Syrian civil war that began in late 2011, with Riyadh urging a more muscular U.S. response, including direct military intervention and provision of sophisticated weapons to the Syrian opposition.
Iran, along with Russia, is the leading backer of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, a member of a minority Shiite sect, and Riyadh views the civil war as part of Iran's fight for sectarian dominance.
In Yemen, the United States and Saudi Arabia have cooperated in the campaign against al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and efforts to install and stabilize a more cooperative government. When the Saudis began an ongoing bombing campaign last year against Yemeni rebels led by the Shiite Houthi tribesmen, the United States gave some assistance, while quietly disagreeing with Saudi insistence that the Houthis were merely an extension of Iranian aggression.
Most important, Saudi Arabia vehemently objected to the deal involving Iran's nuclear program that U.S.-led international negotiators finalized with Tehran last summer. Once the agreement is implemented, the United States and others will lift international sanctions against Iran, pouring money into its government coffers that Riyadh thinks will be spent on its efforts to take over the region.
Along with other opponents of the deal in the United States and elsewhere, Saudi Arabia thinks that Iran will continue its efforts to develop a nuclear weapon. The administration strongly disagrees, arguing that verification and monitoring provisions - along with terms of the agreement requiring the dismantling of much of Iran's nuclear infrastructure - will restrict its program to energy production.
The administration has frequently raised concerns about Saudi judicial practices, particularly its suppression of nonviolent political dissent. Although it declined to join widespread international denunciations of the arrest and sentencing of Nimr, officials said the administration repeatedly raised the issue in private with Saudi leaders as a matter that could have repercussions in the region and throughout the Muslim world.
Overall, the administration felt that, despite the occasional bumps, its relations with the kingdom had reached a smooth cruising speed since King Salman took over last January after the death of King Abdullah, his half brother.
A promise from Obama last spring to step up military assistance and defense sales to the Persian Gulf region following the Iran deal kept the lid on public dissension for much of last year. More recently, the administration worked hard to bring the Saudis and Iran together for a diplomatic initiative to end Syria's civil war and allow them to increase their joint efforts against the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq.
Last month, Tehran and Riyadh came together for the first time at the same table and agreed to a deal, forged by Secretary of State John F. Kerry, to promote talks between the Syrian opposition and Assad representatives leading to a transition government and eventual elections.
In mid-December, Saudi Arabia held a meeting of disparate opposition leaders who agreed to form a negotiating committee for talks that are scheduled to begin under the auspices of the United Nations on Jan. 25.
The Washington Post
Mon Jan 04 2016
Yemeni protesters take part in a demonstration outside the Saudi embassy in Sanaa against the death sentence on Shiite cleric and anti-government protest leader Nimr al-Nimr (portrait) in Sanaa, on Oct 18, 2014 - REUTERS
Aliff Aziz 'buka mulut’ isu ditangkap khalwat dengan Ruhainies
Enggan tuding jari pada Bella Astilah yang didakwa menjadi dalang, sebaliknya, anggap itu kesilapan sendiri.
Dana RM30 juta untuk misi sedia program peningkatan kemahiran belia India - Steven Sim
Inisiatif itu akan menekankan latihan di bidang-bidang kritikal yang memenuhi kehendak industri dan keperluan negara.
HRDCORP peruntuk RM10 juta program kemahiran belia India
Dana RM10 juta yang diperuntuk di bawah HRD Corp bagi pelaksanaan inisiatif Kemahiran India Malaysia (MISI) Kementerian Sumber Manusia (KESUMA)-Unit Transformasi Masyarakat India (MITRA) akan diguna bagi menyediakan program peningkatan kemahiran kepada golongan belia komuniti itu di negara ini
Kekurangan jururawat diunjurkan hampir 60 peratus 2030
Kekurangan jururawat diunjurkan kepada hampir 60 peratus menjelang 2030.
Menteri Kesihatan Datuk Seri Dr Dzulkefly Ahmad berkata Dalam menangani isu ini, kerjasama antara sektor awam dan swasta dapat membantu untuk mengatasi kekurangan petugas kejururawatan di Malaysia yang diperlukan untuk memenuhi keperluan penjagaan kesihatan.
Menteri Kesihatan Datuk Seri Dr Dzulkefly Ahmad berkata Dalam menangani isu ini, kerjasama antara sektor awam dan swasta dapat membantu untuk mengatasi kekurangan petugas kejururawatan di Malaysia yang diperlukan untuk memenuhi keperluan penjagaan kesihatan.
Negara kekurangan 30,000 ribu jurutera - PM Anwar
Malaysia ketika ini berhadapan kekurangan 30 ribu jurutera.
Justeru Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim berkata program Pendidikan Teknikal dan Latihan Vokasional (TVET) akan dipertingkat bagi menampung kelompongan profession itu di negara ini.
Justeru Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim berkata program Pendidikan Teknikal dan Latihan Vokasional (TVET) akan dipertingkat bagi menampung kelompongan profession itu di negara ini.
"I’m sorry" - Aliff Aziz menangis teresak-esak mohon maaf pada Bella Astillah
Aliff Aziz akhirnya bersuara, mengaku salah dengan tindakan yang dilakukannya.
PM yakin kenaikan gaji penjawat awam dapat sokongan Ahli Parlimen
Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim yakin usaha kerajaan menaikkan gaji penjawat awam lebih 13 peratus, mendapat sokongan daripada semua Ahli Parlimen
Kekurangan jururawat diunjur hampir 60 peratus 2030 - Dr Dzulkefly
Kerjasama sektor awam dan swasta dapat bantu atasi kekurangan petugas kejururawatan di Malaysia yang diperlukan untuk memenuhi keperluan penjagaan kesihatan.
Delegasi Hamas ke Mesir, teruskan rundingan gencatan senjata
Ketua Hamas, Ismail Haniyeh sahkan delegasi akan ke Mesir, untuk meneruskan rundingan gencatan senjata dengan Israel
Pembinaan semula Gaza ambil masa berdekad lamanya
Laporan UNDP mendedahkan proses pembinaan semula infrastruktur yang musnah di Gaza akan mengambil masa beberapa dekad
Presiden Iran, Pakistan adakan pertemuan luas kerjasama
Presiden Iran, Ebrahim Raisi mengadakan pertemuan dengan Presiden Pakistan, Asif Ali Zardari, di kediaman rasmi Presiden di Islamabad dalam lawatan tiga hari beliau ke negara tersebut pada Isnin.
EU setuju luaskan sekatan ke atas Iran
Menurut Ketua Dasar Luar EU, Josep Borrell, perkara itu dipersetujui mesyuarat Menteri Luar blok tersebut.
Berita antarabangsa pilihan sepanjang hari ini
Antara pelbagai berita luar negara yang disiarkan di Astro AWANI, berikut adalah yang paling menjadi tumpuan sepanjang hari ini.
Pertembungan Iran-Israel lebih kepada persaingan ego pemimpin - Penganalisis
Konflik yang berlaku antara Iran dan Israel ketika ini merupakan pertembungan pemimpin utama semata-mata.
Konflik Asia Barat: Jemaah Haji jangan bimbang, tumpu perhatian kepada ibadat - TH
Jemaah haji dinasihatkan untuk tidak merasa bimbang dengan konflik di Asia Barat dan menumpukan perhatian sepenuhnya kepada ibadat haji mereka.
Kekacauan di Asia Barat perlukan pengendali lapangan terbang proaktif tangani perubahan penerbangan - Pakar
Penutupan ruang udara dilihat akan menjejaskan sebahagian trafik penumpang, terutamanya untuk destinasi yang terletak di Iran.
Konflik Iran-Israel: Kerajaan utamakan keselamatan jemaah haji - Mohd Na'im
Menteri di Jabatan Perdana Menteri (Hal Ehwal Agama) Datuk Mohd Na'im Mokhtar menjelaskan, keselamatan dan kebajikan jemaah haji menjadi keutamaan kerajaan dan TH.
AS mungkin tidak kena sekatan terhadap Iran, bimbang harga minyak mentah naik mendadak
Iran tidak akan lakukan serangan besar yang boleh melumpuhkan Israel dan Israel juga tidak akan berbuat demikian terhadap Iran.
PM bincang dengan Kementerian Luar perkembangan semasa di Iran petang ini
Kerajaan akan mengadakan mesyuarat khas petang ini bagi membincangkan situasi semasa di Iran termasuk kemungkinan membawa pulang rakyat Malaysia di negara itu susulan serangan rejim Israel.
Iran nafi diserang Israel, anggap propaganda media Barat
Pegawai Kerajaan Iran mendakwa mendakwa, ia hanyalah sebahagian daripada propaganda media barat, untuk mengelirukan pandangan dunia.