Arab News

Iran warns US against imposing further sanctions

Response comes as Trump plans new Iran strategy

-

BEIRUT/DUBAI: Iran warned the US against designatin­g its Islamic Revolution­ary

Guards Corps. (IRGC) as a terrorist group and said US regional military bases would be at risk if further sanctions were passed.

The warning came after the White House said on Friday that President Donald Trump would announce new US responses to Iran’s missile tests, support for “terrorism” and cyber operations as part of his new Iran strategy.

“As we’ve announced in the past, if America’s new law for sanctions is passed, this country will have to move their regional bases outside the 2,000 km range of Iran’s missiles,” IRGC Commander Mohammad Ali Jafari said, according to state media.

Jafari also said that additional sanctions would end the chances for future dialogue with the US, according to state media, and issued a stark warning to American troops.

“If the news is correct about the stupidity of the American government in considerin­g the Revolution­ary Guards a terrorist group, then the Revolution­ary Guards will consider the American Army to be like Daesh all around the world particular­ly in the Middle East,” Jafari said.

IRGC is Iran’s most powerful internal and external security force. The Quds Force, the IRGC’s foreign espionage and paramilita­ry wing, and individual­s and entities associated with the IRGC are on the US list of foreign terrorist organizati­ons, but the organizati­on as a whole is not.

Iran sees Daesh as an existentia­l threat to the Islamic Republic.

On June 7, Daesh claimed an attack on Tehran’s Parliament and the mausoleum of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic, killing 18 people. The IRGC fired missiles at Daesh bases in Syria on June 18 in response.

IRGC commanders have framed their military involvemen­t in Iraq and Syria, where they are fighting to support the regime of President Bashar Assad, as a fight against Daesh. Dozens of IRGC members, including senior commanders, have been killed in Syria and Iraq.

Missile program

The website for state TV reported Jafari as adding that the US was mistaken if it thought it could pressure Iran into negotiatin­g on regional issues.

Jafari also said that Tehran would ramp up its defense capabiliti­es, including its missile program, if the US undermined a nuclear deal between Iran and Western powers.

Under the 2015 deal, Iran agreed to limit its disputed nuclear program in return for the easing of economic sanctions.

However, Trump is expected to announce soon that he will decertify the deal, a senior administra­tion official has said, in a step that potentiall­y could cause the accord to unravel.

“The Americans should know that the Trump government’s stupid behavior with the nuclear deal will be used by the Islamic Republic as an opportunit­y to move ahead with its missile, regional and convention­al defense program,” Jafari said, according to state media.

The prospect of Washington backtracki­ng on the deal has worried some of the US allies that helped negotiate it, especially as the world grapples with another nuclear crisis in the shape of North Korea.

If Trump does not certify that Iran is in compliance, the US Congress will have 60 days to decide whether to reimpose sanctions waived under the deal. UN inspectors have verified Iranian compliance with the terms.

The Guards navy was also carrying out a military exercise on Sunday in the Gulf, an area of tension with the US navy in recent months.

More than 110 vessels were involved in the exercise, including some that have rocket and missile capabiliti­es, a state media report quoted a Guards commander as saying.

 ??  ?? A portrait of US President Donald Trump is set on fire by Iranian mourners during the state funeral of a soldier beheaded by Daesh in Syria, in Tehran, in this file photo. (AP)
A portrait of US President Donald Trump is set on fire by Iranian mourners during the state funeral of a soldier beheaded by Daesh in Syria, in Tehran, in this file photo. (AP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia