Updated on
Summary Iran has rejected the claim that the Islamic Republic is interfering in Syrias internal affairs.
Irans government has denied allegations it is playing a role in Syrias bloody crackdown on political opposition. But reports in the international press continue to contend that Iran is helping Syria militarily.Irans Foreign Ministry spokesman, Ramin Mehmanparast, said that Tehran is “not intervening” to help Syrias government repress its people. He described as baseless, allegations from the European Union that the Quds Brigade of Irans Revolutionary Guards is involved in the Syrian crackdown.During a news conference last week, Mehmanparast urged other countries “not to intervene in Syrias internal political crisis.”Reports in the Arab and international press have accused both Iran and its Lebanese ally, Hezbollah, of helping Syrian authorities deal with the popular uprising.Former Iranian President Abolhassan Bani Sadr, now an exiled opponent of Irans government, is among those who say Iran and Hezbollah are helping Syria in the crackdown.He says the Iranian regime is helping Syria in every possible way. He says he has information that 3,000 Iranian Revolutionary Guards and 2,200 Hezbollah fighters are working with the Syrian government. But he contends that Saudi Arabia is also intervening in Syria - on the opposition side.Hilal Khashan, who teaches political science at the American University of Beirut, says Iran is in fact starting to distance itself from the Syrian regime, anticipating that it may fall. He notes that Irans Foreign Minister, Ali Akbar Salehi, urged Syria last week to address its peoples “legitimate demands.”“The fact that the Iranians are beginning to talk to the Syrians and telling the regime to accommodate the legitimate demands of the Syrian people means that they are concluding that the regime in Damascus is unsalvageable. In the long run, the regime will collapse,” he said.Khashan also says Iran has been trying to mend fences with the Gulf Arab states, perhaps as a prelude to a policy shift on Syria. He notes that Irans foreign minister met with the leader of Qatar last week to discuss developments in Syria.“The Iranians are trying to find alternatives and thats why the Iranians are trying also to mend fences with the countries of the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council). A few days ago, the Emir of Qatar visited Tehran and the visit had to do with the beginning of the careful shift of the Iranian position vis-a-vis Syria,” Khashan stated.Khashan says both Iran and neighboring Turkey are major regional power brokers, and that each country is working to change its policy toward Syria, slowly. He says its impossible for them to change their policy 180 degrees overnight, but that they are preparing for it.”
