Iran, Turkey presidents meet to defuse tension

Turkey’s President Tayyip Erdogan meets with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani during the 13th Economic Cooperation Organization Summit in Islamabad on Wednesday. (Reuters)
Updated 02 March 2017
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Iran, Turkey presidents meet to defuse tension

DUBAI: Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and Turkey’s President Tayyip Erdogan agreed on Wednesday to improve ties, including in the fight against terrorism, Iran’s state news agency IRNA said, following some angry exchanges between the regional rivals.
Tehran and Ankara support opposite sides in the conflict in Syria. Largely Shiite Iran backs the regime of President Bashar Assad, while Turkey, which is majority Sunni, has backed elements of the Syrian opposition.
Last month Erdogan and Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu accused Iran of trying to destabilize Syria and Iraq and of sectarianism, prompting Tehran to summon Ankara’s ambassador.
Erdogan and Rouhani met on the sideline of an economic cooperation summit in the Pakistani capital Islamabad, IRNA said, though it gave no details of their talks.
Regional rivalry between Iran and Turkey is nothing new, but political analysts have linked Ankara’s tougher rhetoric to US President Donald Trump’s approach to the Middle East. Trump has been sharply critical of Iran, including a nuclear deal it clinched in 2015 with major powers, while Turkey, a NATO ally, is hoping for improved ties with Washington after a chill caused partly by US criticism of Ankara’s human rights record.
In another conciliatory move by Turkey, Cavusoglu told IRNA in an interview published on Wednesday that Ankara had appreciated Tehran’s expressions of support for the government during a failed military coup against Erdogan on July 15, 2016.
“Iran was with us to support our government in every minute at that night while some other countries only called us days or even weeks after the attempted coup,” IRNA quoted him as saying.
Last week Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif had called Turkey an ungrateful neighbor.
“They (Turkey) accuse us of sectarianism but do not remember we did not sleep on the night of the coup,” he said.


Vessel struck off Oman’s Muscat, UKMTO says

Updated 01 March 2026
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Vessel struck off Oman’s Muscat, UKMTO says

DUBAI: A vessel was struck ​on Sunday by an unknown projectile 50 nautical miles north of ‌Oman’s capital, ‌Muscat, ​the ‌United ⁠Kingdom ​Maritime Trade Operations agency ⁠said.
The attack resulted in a fire in the ⁠vessel’s engine ‌room that ‌has ​been ‌brought under ‌control, UKMTO added.
It is the second incident ‌the agency reports on Sunday after reporting ⁠an ⁠incident off Oman’s Kumzar in the Strait of Hormuz.

Iranian state television said Sunday that an oil tanker was sinking after it was struck while attempting to pass through the strategic Strait of Hormuz.
The incident took place as Iran exchanged strikes with the United States and Israel, who launched an attack Saturday that killed the Islamic republic’s supreme leader.
“The fate of the offending oil tanker that was struck while attempting to illegally pass through the Strait of Hormuz is that it is now sinking,” state TV reported, without elaborating.
It carried footage showing heavy black smoke emanating from the burning tanker at sea.
The strait carries a quarter of the world’s seaborne oil and a fifth of all liquified natural gas.
On Saturday, Iran’s Revolutionary Guards had warned that the vital waterway was unsafe due to US and Israeli attacks and was therefore closed to ships.