Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif appealed Monday to Saudi Arabia to work together with his government toward achieving regional "stability", as he pressed a tour seeking rapprochement with Gulf Arab states.
Zarif arrived in Doha after first stopping over in Kuwait and Oman for meetings with top officials aimed at giving assurance that a deal Tehran secured with world powers on its nuclear program is in their interest.
He was to hold talks in Qatar with emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Than as well as with his Qatari counterpart Khaled al-Attiyah, an Iranian diplomat in Doha told Agence France Presse.
During his stopover in Muscat, Zarif appealed to Saudi Arabia to jointly work with Iran to resolve regional issues.
"I believe that our relations with Saudi Arabia should expand as we consider Saudi Arabia as an extremely important country in the region and the Islamic world," Zarif told AFP.
"We believe that Iran and Saudi Arabia should work together in order to promote peace and stability in the region."
He also praised Oman's role in last month's negotiations between Iran and world powers including the United States that paved the way for the landmark nuclear deal.
"We expressed our appreciation for the very central and positive role that the sultanate had played in facilitating these talks," Zarif said after he met with Sultan Qaboos.
Unlike Sunni-dominated Saudi Arabia, locked in a decades-long rivalry with Iran, Oman maintains good relations with Tehran and Qaboos has acted as an intermediary between Western countries and Iran in recent years.
According to reports, the sultanate hosted secret talks between Iran and the United States in the lead-up to the six-month accord on Iran's nuclear program.
World powers, Arab states of the Gulf, and Israel suspect Tehran's nuclear ambitions include acquiring a nuclear weapon, a charge Iran vehemently denies.
The nuclear deal reached in Geneva on November 24 was welcomed by the Sunni-ruled Gulf Arab states, which have long been concerned about Shiite Iran's regional ambitions.
The Saudi government, however, reacted cautiously, saying the deal could mark the first step towards a comprehensive solution for Iran's nuclear program, "if there are good intentions".
Zarif on Monday voiced again his hopes to "soon" visit Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, whose foreign minister announced during a visit to Tehran last week that his government was ready to create a joint economic commission with Iran.
"I am ready to go to Saudi Arabia, but it is just a matter of being able to arrange a mutually convenient time. I will visit it soon inshallah (God willing)."
Gulf Cooperation Council foreign ministers, meeting in Kuwait City last week, hoped the interim deal would lead to a permanent agreement on Iran's nuclear program.
The GCC is led by OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia and includes Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, and United Arab Emirates.
After his election in July, Iran's President Hassan Rouhani said he hoped to improve relations with neighboring countries, especially Gulf states.
Zarif said in Kuwait City, the first stop in his tour, that Iran was looking to open a new page in relations with the Gulf.
He reiterated his calls in Oman.
"We feel that relations between countries in the region must be built on mutual trust and friendly ties must be strengthened," Oman News Agency (ONA) quoted him as saying.
Iran is "not planning to deceive the world," added Zarif.
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