The Borneo Post

Iran says strike on Kurd rebels warning to ‘foreign powers’

-

TEHRAN: Iran’s Revolution­ary Guards said yesterday that a missile strike they launched on a Kurdish rebel base in neighbouri­ng Iraq last week should serve as a warning to ‘arrogant foreign powers’.

The elite Guards fired seven medium-range ballistic missiles at the headquarte­rs of the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran in Koysinjaq in Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish region, causing major casualties and damage with what they described as a precision strike.

“With a range of 2,000 kilometres, our missiles endow the Iranian nation with a unique ability to fight against arrogant foreign powers,” Guards commander Major General Mohammad Ali Jafari told the semi- official ISNA news agency.

“All those that have forces, bases and equipment within a 2,000 kilometre radius of Iran’s sacred borders should know that (our) missiles are highly accurate.”

Iranian officials have long referred to the United States as the “world arrogance” and the Guards’ arsenal of medium-range missiles puts US bases in the Gulf and beyond within reach.

Relations between Iran and the United States have nosedived since President Donald Trump abandoned a landmark nuclear agreement in May and reimposed crippling sanctions in a major blow to its already struggling economy.

“( Our) recent vengeance upon terrorists had a very clear message for enemies, especially superpower­s who think they can bully us,” said Jafari.

The KDPI had sent numerous “terrorist teams” into Iran’s West Azerbaijan, Kurdistan and Kermanshah provinces in recent months, according to the Guards.

The group is Iran’s oldest Kurdish movement and several of its leaders have been assassinat­ed by Tehran in the past.

Iran’s ballistic missile programme is a bone of contention, particular­ly for Washington, which has repeatedly accused Tehran of seeking to destabilis­e the region.

Tehran says its missile arsenal is vital to its defence in a troubled region. — AFP

 ??  ?? An Iranian Kurdish Peshmerga member of the Iranian Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDPI) collects books while inspecting damage at the party headquarte­rs in Koysinjaq, 100 kilometres east of the capital of the northern Iraqi Kurdish autonomous region Arbil. — AFP photo
An Iranian Kurdish Peshmerga member of the Iranian Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDPI) collects books while inspecting damage at the party headquarte­rs in Koysinjaq, 100 kilometres east of the capital of the northern Iraqi Kurdish autonomous region Arbil. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia