Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Iranian Revolution­ary Guards, humiliated by attack, vow to retaliate

- By Rod Nordland

BEIRUT — Soldiers in dress uniform lay prone in the street. Others, apparently heavily armed, faced the assailants, then threw themselves to the ground without firing back. Some just ran for their lives.

Captured on video and widely shared on social media, the attack over the weekend on an Islamic Revolution­ary Guards Corps parade in Iran was a humiliatin­g blow. A local Arab separatist group claimed responsibi­lity, but Iran said the perpetrato­rs were backed by Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and the United States.

On Monday, Iranian officials vowed revenge against all three countries and Israel.

The attack has escalated tensions between Iran and the Gulf States and their American allies. The Trump White House has taken a hard line against Iran, withdrawin­g from a nuclear agreement and imposing harsh sanctions that have damaged Iran’s flailing economy.

Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have clashed with Iran over Yemen, Qatar and Syria. The conflicts are expected to take center stage at the United Nations General Assembly this week.

The attack on Saturday in Ahvaz, Iran, killed at least 25 people, including some children and other civilians who had been among the spectators, according to Iran’s state news agency, IRNA, and a dozen members of the elite Revolution­ary Guards.

A widely posted image on Facebook showed members of the Revolution­ary Guards military band, wearing tricolor sashes and carrying musical instrument­s, hiding in a drainage ditch — described by many commenters as a sewer — during the attack.

Iranian officials, including the country’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, focused blame on Arab kingdoms on the Persian Gulf, as well as the United States. “This cowardly act was carried out by those who are rescued by Americans wherever they are entangled in Syria and Iraq and their hands are in the Saudi and Emirati pockets,” Ayatollah Khamenei said on Monday, the Fars news agency reported.

In a speech on Monday at a funeral ceremony for the victims of the attack, the deputy commander of the Revolution­ary Guards, Hossein Salami, said, “You have seen our revenge before,” according to the news agency Al Ahed, which is run by the pro-Iranian organizati­on Hezbollah in Lebanon. “You will see that our response will be crushing and devastatin­g, and you will regret what you have done.”

The Ahvaz National Resistance, a little-known group with roots among the Arab minority of Iran, claimed responsibi­lity for the attack on Saturday. So did the Islamic State terrorist group, though the links to that group were ambiguous.

 ?? Ebrahim Noroozi/Associated Press ?? Families of victims of Saturday’s terror attack on a military parade in the southweste­rn city of Ahvaz that killed 25 people attend a mass funeral ceremony Monday in Ahvaz, Iran. Thousands of mourners gathered at the Sarallah Mosque on Ahvaz’s Taleghani junction and carried caskets in the sweltering heat.
Ebrahim Noroozi/Associated Press Families of victims of Saturday’s terror attack on a military parade in the southweste­rn city of Ahvaz that killed 25 people attend a mass funeral ceremony Monday in Ahvaz, Iran. Thousands of mourners gathered at the Sarallah Mosque on Ahvaz’s Taleghani junction and carried caskets in the sweltering heat.
 ?? Atta Kenare/AFP/Getty Images ?? Iranians carry the body of a victim on Monday during a public funeral ceremony in the southweste­rn Iranian city of Ahvaz. The ceremony was held for those killed during an attack on a military parade over the weekend.
Atta Kenare/AFP/Getty Images Iranians carry the body of a victim on Monday during a public funeral ceremony in the southweste­rn Iranian city of Ahvaz. The ceremony was held for those killed during an attack on a military parade over the weekend.

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