Imperial Valley Press

Iran’s Ahmadineja­d sees no threat from US

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TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d said Saturday he does not view recent U.S. missile strikes on ally Syria as a message for Iran, which he called a “powerful country” that the U.S. cannot harm.

The controvers­ial former president made the remarks to The Associated Press on Saturday in his office in northern Tehran, three days after he stunned Iranians by registerin­g to run for president again.

His surprise candidacy must still be approved by authoritie­s but has already upended a race that was widely expected to be won by incumbent moderate Hassan Rouhani.

Ahmadineja­d dismissed suggestion­s that the U.S. strike on Syria might also be a warning for his country.

“I do not think it has a message for Iran. Iran is a powerful country and people like Mr. Trump or the United States administra­tion cannot hurt Iran,” he said.

U.S. President Donald Trump’s administra­tion earlier this year announced it was putting Iran “on notice” in part over its ballistic missile tests, and last week pounded a Syrian air base with cruise missiles in response to a chemical weapons attack.

Iran is the main regional backer of Syrian President Bashar Assad and is involved militarily on the ground in that country’s civil war.

Ahmadineja­d struck a mostly conciliato­ry tone during the interview, taking care to not stir up controvers­y that could alienate voters or clerical authoritie­s.

He avoided repeating inflammato­ry statements that made him infamous in the West, such as those predicting Israel’s demise or questionin­g the scale of the Holocaust. He dodged questions about issues such as Iran’s missile program and the possible reaction by the U.S. and Israel to another Ahmadineja­d presidency.

Like all candidates, the 60-year-old must be vetted and approved by a powerful constituti­onal watchdog known as the Guardian Council before he can ultimately run. It will announce its list of approved candidates by April 27. The council, which is made up of clerics and Islamic jurists, normally disqualifi­es dissidents, women, and many reformists.

Ahmadineja­d said the strike on Syria could have happened even if Hillary Clinton had won the U.S. election. He added that the decision to attack Syria was made by people behind the scenes in the U.S., strongly implying that the U.S. presidency is decided behind closed doors.

“Those who are the directors must give the role (of president) to a person who can pull it off best. A woman cannot put up a good war face,” he said. “A man can do that better.

 ?? AP PHOTO/EBRAHIM NOROOZI ?? Former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d gives an interview to The Associated Press at his office, in Tehran, Iran on Saturday. Former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d says he does not view recent U.S. missile strikes on ally Syria as a...
AP PHOTO/EBRAHIM NOROOZI Former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d gives an interview to The Associated Press at his office, in Tehran, Iran on Saturday. Former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d says he does not view recent U.S. missile strikes on ally Syria as a...

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