Qatar’s foreign minister says ‘regional countries are not an enemy of Iran’
Qatar’s minister of state for foreign affairs has called for a de-escalation in hostilities across the Middle East and urged Iran and the US to return to the negotiation table for a mediated solution.
Speaking to Al Jazeera in an exclusive interview, Mohammed bin Abdulaziz al-Khulaifi said that Iran’s attacks on its regional neighbours bring “benefit for no one”.
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Iran has responded to a nearly two-week-long bombardment campaign from the United States and Israel by firing missiles and drones at its neighbours in the Gulf region and beyond, causing casualties, damaging critical infrastructure and severely disrupting the region’s energy-driven economy.
Al-Khulaifi said Qatar remains “extremely worried” about the wider range of attacks, including against civilian infrastructure.
“It’s unfortunate where we are standing right now,” the minister said.
“We also believe that there is no pathway to a sustainable and long-lasting solution other than returning to the negotiation table,” he told Al Jazeera.
Qatar condemns in the “strongest terms, the unjustified and outrageous attacks on the state of Qatar that directly impact its own sovereignty”, he said.
Doha will continue to take “every possible and legal measure to defend and practise its exercise of self-defence against this aggression”, he added.
Al-Khulaifi said the conflict demands a “global solution” to ensure that the Gulf’s energy supply chain keeps moving through the Strait of Hormuz, where global traffic has been severely disrupted by the conflict.
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Ensuring freedom of movement through the waterway is “very critical,” he noted.
It is notable, Al-Khulaifi pointed out, that Iran has targeted countries such as Qatar and Oman, which had previously served as regional mediators and tried to “build bridges between Iran and the West”.
Neither country can play that role as long as the attacks continue, he said.
“We will not be able to fulfil that role under attack, and that’s something the Iranians need to understand.”
Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani tried to convey those points during a phone call with Tehran several days ago, the foreign minister said, when he urged Iran to cease attacks on its neighbours.
“The regional countries are not an enemy of Iran, and the Iranians are not understanding that idea,” Al-Khulaifi told Al Jazeera.
Doha also remains in contact with officials in the US and has encouraged US President Donald Trump to cease hostilities, he said.
“Our line of communication is always open with our colleagues in the United States, and we keep encouraging and supporting the pathway of peace and resolving conflicts through peaceful means.
“We really hope that the parties can find that pathway, end military operations, and return to the negotiation table.”
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