(Refiles to remove extraneous word 'between', para 2)
DUBAI, July 30 (Reuters) - Iran was to revive maritime
security talks on Tuesday with traditional foe the United Arab
Emirates (UAE) in an apparent bid to calm tensions in the Gulf,
although a Gulf official described the discussions as routine
and technical.
The talks follow weeks of heightened political friction
around the strategic waterway stemming from hostility between
Tehran and Washington, the main Western ally of Gulf Arab states
long wary of the Islamic Republic.
The discussions had been off since 2013, but the UAE is
widely seen in the region as wanting to guard its reputation as
a safe business hub.
"The 6th joint meeting will be held on Tuesday between a
visiting seven-member delegation from the United Arab Emirates'
coast guard and Iranian officials in Tehran," Iran's
semi-official Students News Agency (ISNA) reported.
Without giving a source, ISNA said issues from shared
borders, visits by citizens of each nation, illegal entries, and
maritime connections would be discussed.
A Gulf official said the meeting was not related to tensions
in the region.
"It is a technical meeting that was organized a long time
ago to discuss routine maritime issues," the official told
Reuters.
Attacks on Saudi tankers and other vessels off the UAE coast
in May increased tensions between the United States, Iran and
Gulf Arab states. Washington and its Sunni Arab allies blamed
Iran for the attacks, but Tehran denied that.
The UAE tempered its reaction to the attacks, and has also
scaled back its military presence in Yemen, where Saudi Arabia
is involved in a proxy war with Shi'ite Iran.
Iran has said it wants to improve relations with its
regional Sunni rivals Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
"Iran has always given extreme importance to the security of
the Persian Gulf and it needs cooperation among all Persian Gulf
states," said an Iranian official who asked not to be named.
Washington and Tehran are in a protracted standoff over
Iran's nuclear and missile programs, and its regional influence.
Washington has imposed and tightened sanctions on Iran's oil
exports after President Donald Trump pulled out of Iran's 2015
deal with major powers, under which Tehran got access to world
trade in return for curbs on its nuclear programme.
Tehran has repeatedly warned it would block exports through
the waterway if the United States tried to strangle its economy.