Sunni people living in Iran also feel the influence of discrimination. They were forbidden to celebrate Islamic holy days at the Tehran mosque. Sunnis are not allowed to build their own mosque and need to establish an alternative prayer field called namazkhanehs (Watch 2013). Since the 1979 revolution, Sunnis and other ethnic minorities have not served as the leadership position of the Iranian cabinet, ministers, or military. In some areas of Iran, such as Turkmenistan, Sunni information has been deleted in textbooks.
To balance Iran and Saudi Arabia is to cooperate with jihadists, pay close attention to nuclear proliferation, and to prevent the conflict of the Sunni Shiites during the regional war, for the benefit of the United States Yes. This usually requires collaborating with Arab partners to contain Iran, but this is not always the case. But Saudi Arabia and some Israelis, Americans and other Arab governments hope the United States will move everything in Saudi Arabia, and Iran will be in vain. As Defense Secretary Robert Gates, Bush and Obama's Secretary of Defense saw, Saudi said, "I would like to always take Iranian to the last American." For flattering - but without substantial concessions - Saudi Arabia finally made the US President publicly support their selfish worldview
But seeing the current instability of the Middle East through Sunni and Shi'a conflict lenses does not explain the whole picture. The cultural and historical divide between Arabs and Persians strengthened the division between Sunnis and Shi'ites. Mutual distrust between many Arab / Sunni countries and the Persian / Shi'ite forces (Iran) is due to instability including Bahrain, Iraq, Lebanon, Syria and Yemen due to conflicts of interest between state and ideology It deteriorated. Sunni militant organizations like Al Qaeda and Islamic State (IS) use Sunni Arabs, Syrian-Ala Witt-led regime and other non-Sunni governments and campaigns using sectarian and ethnic tensions I get support to become a supporter
In Syria, the conflict is complicated, but it is divided into Shiites - along the Sunni line. Most of the population is Sunni, but the government is Shiite. Iran has always supported Shi'a efforts to fight Sunni opposition by funding militia and dispatching troops. In retaliation, Sunni fighters are targeted at Shi'a populations, Shi'a worship sites, and Iraq (mostly Shi'a). Despite differences in opinion between Sunni and Shi'a Muslims, despite all these violence and distrust, some Muslim leaders call for Shiites to unite with Sunnis. They claim that the struggle between sects only weakens Islam. This united position has been supported since the terrorists targeted the prophet's mosque, which became the second sacred site of Islam in Saudi Arabia during Ramadan. The attacks occurred several months before the pilgrimage. Iran's leadership has also joined the call for solidarity and this position has undergone a major change in a majority view as Saudi Arabian Sunnis.