Iran to reopen embassy in Syria once security conditions are met

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Iran’s foreign ministry said on Tuesday that its embassy in Syrian would reopen once the “necessary conditions” are met, after the diplomatic mission was vandalised following the ouster of Tehran ally Bashar al-Assad.

Iran's embassy in Syria was vandalised when Tehran ally Bashar al-Assad was overthrown, but the foreign ministry announced Tuesday that it would reopen provided the "necessary conditions" are satisfied.(AP)
Iran’s embassy in Syria was vandalised when Tehran ally Bashar al-Assad was overthrown, but the foreign ministry announced Tuesday that it would reopen provided the “necessary conditions” are satisfied.(AP)

“The reopening of the embassy in Damascus requires preparations, the most important of which is ensuring the security and safety of the embassy and its staff,” said foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei.

Aslo read: Prisoner freed by CNN in Syria was member of Assad’s forces who killed civilians and tortured innocent men: Report

He added that work to that end will be pursued “as soon as the necessary conditions are provided”, without offering a specific timeline.

The Iranian embassy in Damascus was ransacked after diplomats abandoned it as rebel forces seized the capital and ousted Assad.

Iran had supported Assad throughout Syria’s civil war, which began in 2011.

Also read: HTS leader calls for disbanding rebel factions, unity in post-Assad Syria

Since his fall, Iran has sought to distance itself from the deposed leader, instead emphasising the history of friendship between the two countries.

Baqaei said on Tuesday that Iran’s “advisory” presence in Syria was “at the invitation of the government”.

“We were never in Syria to support a specific person, group or party,” he said.

“Our presence in Syria was fundamental and principled, and our withdrawal was responsible.”

Baqaei also said that Iran’s rival Israel, which has conducted hundreds of air strikes in Syria since Assad’s fall and sent troops into a UN-patrolled buffer zone, “severely violated Syria’s territorial integrity”.

On Monday, EU foreign affairs chief Kaja Kallas said Russia and Iran “should not have a place” in war-torn Syria now that Assad is gone.

Baqaei slammed the remarks as a “joke,” adding that the era of foreign powers “trying to dictate (policies) on another region is over.”

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