Iran Accuses UAE of Facilitating Aggression at BRICS Meet

Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi accused the UAE of playing a significant role in supporting military aggression against Iran during the BRICS Foreign Ministers' Meeting in New Delhi. He stated that every warplane from the UAE has been documented, and Iran submitted 120 official diplomatic notices to the UN Security Council. Gharibabadi emphasized that the UAE lacks legitimacy to level accusations against Iran due to its own involvement in escalating tensions. Iran warned it would target US bases in the UAE under its right to self-defense, citing the 1974 UN resolution.

Key Points: Iran Accuses UAE of Supporting Military Aggression

  • Iran accuses UAE of supporting military aggression
  • Gharibabadi cites documented warplane flights from UAE
  • Iran submitted 120 diplomatic notices to UN Security Council
  • Iran warns of targeting US bases in UAE in self-defense
2 min read

UAE supported aggression against Tehran: Iran

Iran's Deputy FM Kazem Gharibabadi says UAE supported aggression against Tehran, citing documented evidence of warplanes and 120 UN notices.

"The United Arab Emirates is an aggressor, not merely an accomplice to aggression. - Kazem Gharibabadi"

New Delhi, May 14

Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister on Thursday stated that the United Arab Emirates had played a significant role in the aggression against Iran during the second session of the BRICS Foreign Ministers' Meeting in New Delhi.

Kazem Gharibabadi, Deputy Foreign Minister for Legal and International Affairs of Iran, said: "The United Arab Emirates played a significant role in supporting and facilitating the military aggression against the Islamic Republic of Iran. Therefore, a party that itself contributed to the creation and escalation of tensions lacks any legitimacy to level political accusations and claims against Iran."

According to the Embassy of Iran in India, the Deputy Minister made these remarks in response to the "baseless" allegations made by the United Arab Emirates Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, who had accused Iran of attacking the United Arab Emirates and portrayed Iran as the aggressor.

"When countries facilitate and provide services to aggressors, this is not merely assistance; such conduct itself constitutes aggression. Therefore, the United Arab Emirates is an aggressor, not merely an accomplice to aggression," Gharibabadi said, citing the 1974 United Nations General Assembly Resolution.

He highlighted that "every warplane that took off from the United Arab Emirates has been documented, including the exact time, date and flight path".

He said that Iran had submitted 120 official diplomatic notices to the United Nations Security Council, and that all the evidence had been included in them, the Embassy wrote on the social media platform X.

He emphasised that Iran could not tolerate the situation any longer while Iranian people and infrastructure were being targeted, especially with the "participation and cooperation of one of our neighbours, namely the United Arab Emirates".

"We had no option but to target all facilities of US bases in the United Arab Emirates, or any facilities and installations in the United Arab Emirates in which the United States had a role or participation," he noted.

He said that Iran's actions are fully consistent with the Charter of the United Nations and within the framework of the inherent right of self-defence.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
An important point about the 1974 UN resolution - if you provide services to an aggressor, you become one yourself. But this also makes me wonder about the bigger game here. For India, maintaining balance between these Gulf nations and Iran is like walking a tightrope. Hope our diplomats are watching closely.
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Vikram M
I'm not so quick to take sides here. Both countries have their own narratives. UAE says Iran attacked them, Iran says UAE supported aggression. The truth is probably somewhere in between. What's clear is that this is a regional power struggle, and India should avoid taking sides publicly. Our energy security depends on both.
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Rohit P
"Every warplane that took off from UAE has been documented" - that's a powerful statement with time, date and flight path. If Iran has all this evidence submitted to UNSC, then UAE's position is seriously compromised. But at the end of the day, Middle East politics is messy, and India should just focus on protecting its 9 million diaspora in the Gulf. 🇮🇳
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James A
Interesting to hear Iran's perspective through BRICS. The claim that Iran targeted only US bases and facilities in UAE suggests they tried to limit collateral damage. But let's be honest - anytime a country says their actions are "fully consistent with UN Charter," you know there's room for debate. The BRICS platform seems to be giving Iran a voice against what it sees as U.S.-UAE collusion.
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Sneha F
Good that BRICS provides a platform for such discussions. But I find it concerning that Iran is essentially

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