DUBAI: Prime Minister Theresa May told Gulf leaders on Wednesday that Britain would help “push back” against Iranian aggression as they agreed on a strategic partnership to deepen ties.

Addressing a summit of the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council in Bahrain, May reaffirmed British support for traditional allies in the region, while also seeking to strengthen post-Brexit trade.

“I want to assure you that I am clear-eyed about the threat that Iran poses to the Gulf and to the wider Middle East,” she told leaders of the GCC, which brings together Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.

The mainly Sunni Arab Gulf monarchies and Shia Iran are bitter regional rivals, at odds over a range of issues including the wars in Syria and Yemen.

GCC countries are concerned about Iran’s growing influence in the region, especially after last year’s nuclear deal between Tehran and world powers took a step towards ending its international isolation.

The Iran agreement was “vitally important for regional security,” May told the summit. “But we must also work together to push back against Iran’s aggressive regional actions.”

In a joint statement after the summit, Britain and the GCC agreed to a “strategic partnership” that would foster “political, defence, security and trade” ties, while “developing collective approaches to regional issues”.

In their statement, GCC states and Britain said they “oppose and will work together to counter Iran’s destabilising activities”.

As part of strengthening military cooperation, Britain will maintain a presence “throughout the Gulf”, the statement said, including through British defence staff to be based in Dubai.

During her speech, May said the two sides would study liberalising trade as Britain prepares to leave the European Union after the shock referendum vote to quit the bloc.

“I want these talks ... to pave the way for an ambitious trade arrangement” after Brexit, she said in Bahrain, which was a British protectorate for 100 years and gained full independence in 1971.

May was the first woman and first British leader to address a GCC summit, as Gulf countries deepen ties with major powers beyond longtime ally the United States.

In May last year, France’s President Francois Hollande became the first Western head of state to attend a GCC summit.

US President Barack Obama followed in April this year, seeking to reassure Gulf monarchs about US overtures to Iran.

GCC leaders have expressed concern over the international agreement that lifted sanctions on Iran this year in exchange for guarantees it would not pursue a nuclear weapons capability.

Published in Dawn December 8th, 2016

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