The Jerusalem Post

Iranians chant ‘Death to America’ on eve of sanctions

Pompeo: Penalties are toughest ever placed on Tehran

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DUBAI (Reuters) – Thousands of Iranians chanting “Death to America” rallied on Sunday to mark the anniversar­y of the seizure of the US Embassy during the 1979 Islamic Revolution and the imminent reimpositi­on of US sanctions on Iran’s oil sector.

Students attending the government-organized rally in the capital Tehran, broadcast live by state television, burned the Stars and Stripes, an effigy of Uncle Sam and pictures of US President Donald Trump outside the former embassy compound.

Hardline students stormed the embassy on November 4, 1979, soon after the fall of the US-backed shah, and 52 Americans were held hostage there for 444 days. The two countries have been enemies ever since.

State media said millions turned out for rallies in towns and cities, swearing allegiance to the clerical establishm­ent and Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The figure could not be independen­tly confirmed by Reuters.

Rallies are staged on the anniversar­y of the embassy takeover every year. But rancor is especially strong this year following Trump’s decision in May to withdraw from the world powers’ 2015 nuclear deal with Iran and reimpose sanctions on Tehran.

The deal brought about the lifting of most internatio­nal financial and economic sanctions in return for Tehran curbing its disputed nuclear activity under UN surveillan­ce.

Trump said the deal was weak and favored Iran. The other signatorie­s – Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China – remain committed to the accord.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the penalties set to return on Monday “are the toughest sanctions ever put in place on the Islamic Republic of Iran.”

Interviewe­d on Fox News Sunday, Pompeo said, “There’s a handful of places where countries already have made significan­t reductions in their crude oil exports and need a little more time to get to zero. And we’re going to provide that to them.” He did not elaborate.

Pompeo noted that oil sanctions would be coupled with financial sanctions involving “over 600 designatio­ns of individual­s and companies in Iran.”

The Iranian military said it would launch two days of air defense drills on Monday, assuring Iranians that it could neutralize any threats, state news agency IRNA reported.

“We can assure our people that the enemy will not be able to carry out its threats against our country,” IRNA

quoted the army’s coordinati­ng officer, Habibollah Sayyari, as saying.

Among the anniversar­y events was an exhibition of cartoons in Tehran called “Donald Salman” – a reference to the close ties between the US president and King Salman, ruler of Iran’s regional rival, Saudi Arabia.

“It’s black humor, but the audience can also be brought to reflect on the contradict­ions in the behavior of Trump and [the royal house of] Al Saud,” artist Masoud Shojaei Tabatabai told state television in Tehran.

The restoratio­n of US sanctions on Monday targeting Iran’s oil sales and banking sector is part of an effort by Trump to force Iran to halt its nuclear and ballistic missile programs outright, as well as its support for proxy forces in conflicts across the Middle East.

In a speech on Saturday, Khamenei said Trump’s policies faced opposition around the world. “America’s goal has been to re-establish the domination it had, but it has failed. America has been defeated by the Islamic Republic over the past 40 years,” he said. •

 ?? (Essam al-Sudani/Reuters) ?? A MAN COUNTS Iranian rials at a currency exchange shop, before the start of the US sanctions on Tehran.
(Essam al-Sudani/Reuters) A MAN COUNTS Iranian rials at a currency exchange shop, before the start of the US sanctions on Tehran.

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