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Saudis cannot accept Iranian-backed regime in Yemen: Britain's Hammond

Philip Hammond said that Saudi Arabia felt it necessary to intervene in Yemen to avoid an Iranian-backed regime taking over the country

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British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said on Friday that Saudi Arabia felt it necessary to intervene in Yemen to avoid an Iranian-backed regime taking over the country along its southern border.

"The Saudis are very exercised by the idea of an Iranian-backed regime in Yemen," he told reporters during a visit to Washington. "They cannot accept the idea of an Iranian-backed regime in control of Yemen, which is why they felt compelled to intervene the way they have."

"We know there has been Iranian support for the Houthi and we are all concerned to avoid this becoming a proxy war," he added. Separately, on negotiations for an Iranian nuclear deal, Hammond said of the six areas to cover in the agreement: "We are better than halfway in terms of numbers of areas where we are close enough that we can be confident that in the end game we'll get through."

Tehran is meeting in Lausanne, Switzerland with six major powers: the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China. They aim to hammer out a preliminary framework for an accord by the end of this month ahead of a full deal by June 30.

Hammond declined to say what the main areas of disagreement were with the Iranians in the talks. However, he added that he is willing to travel to Lausanne to join the talks this weekend if necessary. The "Iranian negotiating team in Lausanne wants to get a deal. What we of course never quite know is what the internal politics back in Tehran looks like," he added.

Also Read: Morocco backs Saudi coalition in Yemen
 

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