Shanghai Daily

An attack will be all-out war, Iran warns US, Saudi

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ANY US or Saudi military strike against Iran would bring “allout war,” Tehran said yesterday, keeping up a drumbeat of warnings to its adversarie­s after they accused the Islamic Republic of a strike on Saudi oil facilities.

“I am making a very serious statement that we don’t want war; we don’t want to engage in a military confrontat­ion ... But we won’t blink to defend our territory,” Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif told CNN in an interview.

Asked what the consequenc­e of an American or a Saudi military strike on Iran would be, Zarif said “an all-out war.”

The United States has been discussing with Saudi Arabia and other Gulf allies possible responses to an attack on Saudi oil facilities on Saturday which they blame on Iran, and which US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo described as an act of war on the kingdom but Iran denied it.

Zarif had earlier warned on Twitter that what he described as the B team — including Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman — was deceiving US President Donald Trump into a war against Iran.

The attack was claimed by Yemen’s Houthi group.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi said that Washington and Riyadh had accused Iran “because they don’t believe the oppressed Yemeni nation has reached such a capability,” the state news agency IRNA reported.

The semi-official news agency ISNA quoted Iran’s Rear Admiral Habibollah Sayyari as saying Iran’s adversarie­s would regret any aggression against it.

Trump struck a cautious note on Wednesday. He said there were many options short of war with Iran, which denies involvemen­t in the September 14 strikes that initially halved Saudi oil output. He ordered more sanctions on Tehran.

Zarif also said in a tweet yesterday that Pompeo was trying to delay issuing visas for the Iranian delegation to the upcoming United Nations General Assembly.

Trump said he is not looking to meet Iranian President Hassan Rouhani during a UN event in New York this month.

Separately, Iran’s Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh accused the US of using oil as a “weapon” and said economic conditions were harder under the current US sanctions than during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq.

“Now the situation has become more difficult economical­ly than during the war. At the time of the war, we would sell our oil and get our money and buy whatever we wanted, but now the conditions are very complicate­d,” Zanganeh said, referring to banking sanctions which make it hard for Tehran to receive its oil income.

Referring to the effect of attacks on Saudi oil installati­ons, Zanganeh said: “I don’t think it’s an important issue and soon the balance will be restored in the market.”

(Reuters)

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