Kuwaiti FM Meets Aoun and Miqati Carrying 'Confidence-Building Message'

W460

Kuwaiti Foreign Minister Sheikh Ahmed Nasser al-Mohammed Al-Sabah met Sunday morning with President Michel Aoun in Baabda, hours after he arrived in Beirut and met with Prime Minister Najib Miqati.

After the meeting, the Kuwaiti minister said he is "carrying a Kuwaiti, Gulf, Arab and international message containing measures and ideas to build confidence again with Lebanon."

The Lebanese officials "will not study it, and God willing we will receive an answer soon," Sheikh Ahmed said.

"Lebanon is an arena of hope for everyone, not an arena for aggression. We have demanded that Lebanon not be a platform for any verbal or actual aggression. It should be a bright element and a special icon in the Arab Levant and there is no inclination to interfere in Lebanon's affairs," the minister added.

Lebanon's Foreign Minister Abdallah Bou Habib will visit Kuwait at the end of the month, Sheikh Ahmed said.

Miqati was also invited to visit the oil-rich emirate, he added, without specifying a date.

The visit by Sheikh Ahmed is the first by a senior Gulf official to Beirut since an unprecedented diplomatic row between Lebanon and Saudi Arabia and its neighbors broke out in October.

The crisis was triggered by televised remarks by Lebanese Information Minister George Kordahi in which he described the war in Yemen as futile and an aggression by the Saudi-led coalition.

Following Kordahi's comments, the kingdom recalled its ambassador from Beirut and banned all Lebanese imports, affecting hundreds of businesses and cutting off hundreds of millions in foreign currency to Lebanon. Several Arab countries followed Saudi Arabia's step.

Kordahi, who made his comments before taking his post, resigned in December but the move did not lead to improved relations between the two sides.

The crisis goes deeper than Kordahi's comments aired in late October. It is rooted in Saudi Arabia's uneasiness over the rising influence of Iran in the region, including in Lebanon, once a traditional Saudi ally and recipient of financial assistance from the oil-rich kingdom.

Sheikh Ahmed told reporters after meeting Miqati that his visit to Beirut is part of international efforts for confidence-building measures with Lebanon.

He added that such steps for confidence-building measures do not happen "overnight but they should be the result of tangible steps that are felt by all sides." He added that based on that "things will move forward."

The Kuwaiti official said he handed Miqati and his Lebanese counterpart Bou Habib the demands and "now the brothers in Lebanon should study them and know how to deal with these matters and move ahead." He refused to elaborate on what the demands are.

In the weeks that followed Kordahi's resignation, tensions between Hizbullah and Saudi Arabia continued to rise.

In late December, Saudi Arabia's King Salman called on the Lebanese in a speech "to end the terrorist Hizbullah's control" of Lebanon.

In early January, Hizbullah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah launched a verbal attack against the kingdom, accusing Riyadh of spreading extremist Islamic ideology.

Days later, several Saudi Shiite opposition figures held a conference in a Hizbullah stronghold in Beirut's suburbs in which they criticized the kingdom.

Sheikh Ahmed said that in order for the initiative to be successful there should be no interference in the internal affairs of Arab countries in general, and specifically Gulf states. Lebanon should "not be used a launching pad for oral or active aggression against any country," he added.

Miqati's office said the prime minister told the Kuwaiti guest that Beirut wants excellent relations with all Gulf states.

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