DUBAI - British Prime Minister Tony Blair will call on Wednesday for Middle 
East states to rein in what he calls the threat from Iran and to help advance 
peacemaking between Israelis and Palestinians. 
 
 
 |  Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair speaks to an audience of 
 female students at Zayed University in Abu Dhabi December 19, 2006. 
 [Reuters]
 
 
 | 
Speaking in the United Arab 
Emirates, he will underline what has been the theme of his Middle East tour: 
moderate leaders must be empowered against extremists. 
"We must recognise the strategic threat the government of Iran poses, not its 
people, not possibly all of its ruling elements, but those presently in charge 
of its policy," he will say, according to extracts of his speech released by his 
office. 
Iran seeks "to pin us back in Lebanon, in Iraq and in Palestine", he will 
tell business leaders in Dubai. 
"Our response should be to expose what they are doing, build the alliances to 
prevent it and pin them back across the whole of the region." 
He says to do this "we need the open and clear backing of the countries in 
this region that know better than me what is happening and why". 
Blair's spokesman dismissed suggestions his comments on Iran were designed to 
pit the region's Sunni Muslims against Shi'ite Iran, saying the prime minister 
worked with all faiths. 
The prime minister -- making a push for peace in the Middle East before he 
leaves office next year -- will say the struggle between "moderates and 
extremists" will impact the security of the wider world. 
"It is not too late but it is urgent," he will say. 
Blair visited Turkey, Egypt, Iraq, Israel and the Palestinian territories 
before arriving in the United Arab Emirates. 
Aides say Blair made progress on the trip in exploring ways to end a deadlock 
between Palestinians and Israelis. 
IRAN, SYRIA 
He will pursue talks with world leaders in early 2007, particularly on a 
package of aid for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. 
Abbas has called for elections after failing to form a unity administration 
with the Hamas-led government, which is being boycotted by the West. 
He will list three priorities: to give Abbas's office the capacity to improve 
Palestinians' lives; to engineer an early meeting between Abbas and Israeli 
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and to relaunch the political process for a two-state 
solution. 
"We must support and empower moderate and modernising governments and people 
everywhere in this region," Blair will say. 
"We must mobilise our alliance of moderation in this region and outside it 
and defeat the extremists" whose ideas are based on a "warped" interpretation of 
Islam, he will add. 
Late on Tuesday, Blair told the Dubai-based Al Arabiya television that Syria 
should help to restore stability in Lebanon, Iraq and Palestinian Territories, 
but did not rule out peace in the region without its support. 
"I agree that peace would be easier in the Middle East with Syria, but we 
cannot allow Syria to decide for the region," he said. "We will engage with 
Syria only if they agree on conditions for this partnership," he added but did 
not elaborate. His remarks were aired with Arabic translation.