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Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad chided Saudi Arabia for taking part in a US-hosted Middle East peace meeting, after Arab participation in the event left Tehran isolated, media reported on Monday.
Ahmadinejad bluntly told Saudi King Abdullah in a telephone conversation that he wished the kingdom was not attending the conference alongside Israeli and Palestinian leaders starting on Tuesday in Annapolis outside Washington.
"I wish the name of Saudi Arabia was not among those attending the Annapolis conference," Ahmadinejad told the king late Sunday, according to state news agency IRNA.
"Arab countries should be watchful in the face of the plots and deception of the Zionist enemy," he added. The Islamic republic - which has made non-recognition of Israel one of its main ideological themes - has been left isolated by the attendance at the meeting of its chief regional ally Syria as well as Saudi Arabia. More than a dozen Arab countries are sending representatives. Iraq's presence is not confirmed and the Hamas movement which controls Gaza in defiance of Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas is one of the few certain Arab absentees.
"The US government, which is an accomplice to Zionist crimes, cannot play the role of saviour by hosting the Annapolis conference," Ahmadinejad told the Saudi king.
Saudi Arabia and other Arab states agreed on Friday to attend the conference, meaning the kingdom will sit at the same table with the Jewish state for the first time to discuss Middle East peacemaking. In another landmark move, Israeli foe Syria agreed on Sunday at the last minute to send Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad.
Damascus had made its presence conditional on the inclusion of the issue of the Golan Heights, which Israel has occupied since 1967, on the agenda of the conference. About a hundred Islamist students protested against the Arab governments' decision outside the Jordanian embassy in Tehran, shouting "Syria, shame on you" as well as the usual "Death to America" and "Death to Israel".
The protestors then pelted the embassy with stones breaking a window. Ahmadinejad spoke by telephone with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on Sunday, saying "only the true representatives of the Palestinian people can take decisions" on their future. Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei also reaffirmed his condemnation of the conference, which he predicted was "doomed to failure".
"They hope the conference will help the usurping Zionist regime and save the honour of the Black House," he said in a speech to militia volunteers, in a sarcastic reference to the White House. Tehran's anger over the involvement of Riyadh in the conference is the latest hiccup in relations between Shia majority Iran and Sunni majority Saudi Arabia that have not always been smooth.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2007

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