RNA - In remarks published after Aoun's trip to Saudi Arabia on Wednesday, he said Iran's support for Hezbollah "could continue indefinitely."
The Lebanese president, who was speaking to Saudi-run Asharq al-Awsat newspaper, said Lebanon was seeking normal relations with other Arab countries regardless of the state of relations between Beirut and Tehran.
"We have normal relations with Iran," which "shouldn't be a barrier in the face of normal relations with the Arab world," he said.
Since 1985, Iran has maintained warm relations with Hezbollah in a bid to bolster regional resistance against the Israeli regime. Iran provided military assistance to Hezbollah through the years of military confrontation with the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon, which ended in 2000. Iran and Hezbollah have also been contributing to the anti-terrorism push in Syria, where militant groups supported by governments in the Middle East and the West have been engaged in a brutal war against the Syrian government since 2011.
Aoun left Riyadh for the Qatari capital of Doha on Wednesday. Reports said the Lebanese president had managed to secure Saudi Arabia's approval for an arms deal during the trip, although no detail was available.
The former army general, whose Christian party is allied with Hezbollah, was elected as president in October after a 29-month vacuum in Lebanon’s top post. That was followed by a parliament decision in December to approve a national unity government headed by pro-Western Saad Hariri, who is also close to Saudi Arabia.
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