Arab News

Netanyahu ‘dragging West into total war’: Iranian diplomat

Tehran’s charge d’affaires to UK: ‘Another mistake’ by Israel will be met by ‘stronger’ response

- Arab News

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is trying to drag the West into a “total war” in the Middle East, Iran’s top diplomat in the UK has warned.

In his first comments since Tehran’s drone and ballistic missile attack last week, Seyed Mehdi Hosseini Matin, Iran’s charge d’affaires to the UK, said “another mistake” by Israel would be met by a response, The Guardian reported.

Tehran would carry out a stronger attack without warning, unlike last week’s strike, which was communicat­ed days in advance, he added.

The salvo of more than 300 drones and ballistic missiles came in response to the April 1 Israeli strike on the Iranian Consulate in Syria, which killed senior Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps officials.

Matin said: “The response to the next mistake of the Zionist will not take 12 days’ time. It will be decided as soon as we see what the hostile regime has done. It will be immediate, and without warning. It will be stronger and more severe.”

Israel has committed to responding to the Iranian attack but has yet to release any informatio­n.

Matin said Iran had ruled out attacking civilian targets or completing its nuclear weapons program, both before the escalation and following any potential Israeli response.

US and European leaders have called for calm in conversati­ons with Netanyahu, but have also urged the launch of a new round of sanctions on Iran in the wake of last week’s attack.

Matin denied that Tehran had made a strategic error in launching the strike, saying Western powers are “losing credibilit­y” in the Middle East and the US will end up leaving the region.

“This is a good opportunit­y for Western countries to demonstrat­e that they are rational actors, and they are not going to be entrapped by Netanyahu and his goal, which is to be in power for as long as he could actually stay in power,” Matin added.

“Iran has considered its actions very carefully, and understood that there is a trap, but not for Iran: For the Western countries and allied countries in which they are drawn by the Zionist state into a total war inside the Middle East, and the whole world soon may be unable to control the consequenc­es.” Before Iran responded to Israel’s strike on its consulate, Tehran had urged Western officials to condemn the Damascus attack and push for a ceasefire in Gaza, Matin said.

But figures, including UK Foreign Secretary David Cameron, rejected the Iranian requests. “As Cameron mentioned, rightly, every nation has the right to defend itself against this kind of flagrant breach of diplomatic and internatio­nal law,” Matin said, adding that Iran’s drone and ballistic missile attack

had only targeted Israeli military sites.

“Iranian forces didn’t target any populated sites so as to prevent human casualties, nor did it attack government buildings and centers. It was a legitimate defense operation that was conducted in a way that gave considerab­le warning,” he added.

“Now, I can say that the mission is accomplish­ed. And that’s it. That’s what we have announced very publicly, that that mission is

concluded.”

Tehran had been forced to reinstate deterrence in the wake of the consulate strike, Matin said, adding that the response had displayed “military capabiliti­es, missiles, and drones more powerful than what all the internatio­nal community expected from Iran.

“Nobody can, at the moment, imagine that Iran is Iran of the Iran-Iraq war. Iran is now a regional superpower.”

 ?? AFP ?? Israeli military spokesman Daniel Hagari poses next to an Iranian ballistic missile which fell in Israel on the weekend, in the southern Israeli city of Kiryat Malachi.
AFP Israeli military spokesman Daniel Hagari poses next to an Iranian ballistic missile which fell in Israel on the weekend, in the southern Israeli city of Kiryat Malachi.

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