"Saudi
Arabia is responsible for this action, as well as for compensating Iran
for injuries to the embassy personnel and the damages to the embassy
building," said Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Hossein Jaberi Ansari
on Thursday, according to state-run IRIB News. "... Iran reserves the
right to (legally) pursue this matter."
According
to Ansari, the Iranian Embassy in the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, was
damaged and several guards were injured in the late Wednesday airstrike.
CNN
could not independently confirm whether the embassy was hit and, if so,
how severely. The road to the embassy was closed down. Three witnesses
in the area around it reported a small explosion Wednesday night but no
obvious airstrikes.
And the
Saudi-led coalition involved in the Yemeni war pushed back against the
claim, with spokesman Col. Ahmed Asseri saying an investigation is
needed.
"This is not credible because we have not seen any evidence," Asseri said. "But we will investigate."
Of
course, it's doubtful Iran will readily accept the results of a Saudi
investigation. Not in light of the longstanding tensions between
Sunni-dominated Saudi Arabia and Shiite-led Iran, which have escalated
in recent days, threatening an even bigger showdown that could roil not
only the Middle East but the world.
Iran bans Saudi imports, pilgrimages to Saudi cities
The Sanaa airstrike, and the war of words that followed, come on the heels of Saturday's mass execution in Saudi Arabia of 47 people, among them prominent Shiite cleric Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr, on terrorism charges.
This
act spurred anger in Iran, where protests quickly broke out. The Saudi
Embassy in Tehran was attacked and set on fire, prompting Saudi leaders
to sever diplomatic ties with Iran.
Several other nations have sided with
Riyadh in this growing conflict, including Bahrain -- where a Sunni
monarch rules over a predominantly Shiite nation -- and Kuwait and the
United Arab Emirates, both of which recalled their ambassadors to Iran.
Yet Iran has remained defiant, with President Hassan Rouhani on Tuesday lashing out at Saudi Arabia for cutting ties in response to an angry reaction that he called "only natural."
"Of
course, the Saudi government, in order to cover up its crime of
beheading a religious leader has resorted to a strange measure and has
severed its ties with the Islamic Republic," Rouhani said during a
meeting with Danish Foreign Minister Kristian Jensen in Tehran
"Undoubtedly, such moves will never hide that great crime," Rouhani added, according to Iran's state-run Press TV.
On Thursday, Iran acted out once more against Saudi Arabia -- this time, economically.
The Iranian Cabinet passed a measure banning the import of all products from Saudi Arabia and prohibiting Iranians from making pilgrimages to the holy cities of Mecca and Medina,
the semiofficial Tasneem news agency reported. Millions make
pilgrimages each year to those two Saudi cities in rites of passage for
Muslims worldwide.
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