Saudi Arabia is allegedly putting pressure on its allies in the Persian Gulf to disrupt trade links with Iran, Press TV reports.
The kingdom was strongly opposed tothe nuclear deal withIran and afterfailing tosecure the deal; the Saudis are now turning tonew methods ofdisrupting Tehrans business activities.
Saudi Arabia and Bahrain have reportedly banned Iranian-flagged vessels fromentering their waters and imposed other shipping restrictions, Press TV reported.
Nevertheless, some observers noted that the Saudis effort is unlikely tohave an impact onthe overall business relationship between Iran and its allies.
The latest figures show Iran's oil exports will rise bynearly 60 percent froma year ago inMay, indicating that Tehran is retaking market share ata faster pace thananalysts had projected.
Irans sales toEurope are rising fast, while loadings toAsia have already grown tolevels not seen since2012.
One ofthe key allies ofSaudi Arabia is the United Arab Emirates. It has strong trade and business relations withIran. The bulk ofIrans imports fromthe Persian Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), which amounted to $37 billion in2015, were exports fromthe UAE.
Even beforethe nuclear deal, Irans economy had been ona strong recovery path, according toPress TV. President Hassan Rouhani said the country's economy is set togrow insurplus offive percent this year.
Looking atthe demographics, Iran has a population ofover 80 million. This provides the country withhuge opportunities asthe worlds last unexploited major frontier market.
According toPress TV, Irans labor force is relatively well-educated and Irans economy is more diversified thanother oil exporters inthe region.
Furthermore, Iran is already integrated intothe Persian Gulf economic systems and there is hardly anything that Saudi Arabia can do that can seriously disentangle that, Shashank Joshi, a senior research fellow atthe Royal United Services Institute inLondon told Bloomberg.
Joshi further said the Saudis cant do much toblock Iran atthe global level, buttheyre applying pressure onIran wherever they are able todo so, tolimit its political and economic influence.