Bangkok Post

Tehran vows to lead Persian Gulf security

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TEHRAN: Iran’s president said yesterday his country should lead regional security in the strategic Persian Gulf and criticised the presence of foreign forces, as the country’s nuclear deal with world powers collapses and the US deployed more troops to boost security for its Arab allies.

The US has said Iran is behind a series of attacks on the region’s energy infrastruc­ture, including a major drone-and-missile hit on Saudi Arabia’s oil industry that shook global energy markets. Iran has denied the allegation­s and said any retaliator­y strikes from the US or Saudi Arabia will lead to “all-out war’.’

Speaking during a military parade, President Hassan Rouhani warned that the presence of foreign forces in the Gulf could cause problems for the world’s “energy security’’.

He said that Iran extends its “hand of friendship and brotherhoo­d’’ toward regional nations for overseeing security in the Persian Gulf and its narrowest point, the Strait of Hormuz, where onefifth of global oil exports passes.

Along with boosting troop and equipment levels in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, the US is leading a maritime coalition, which includes the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Britain and Australia, to secure the area’s waterways and vital oil trade routes.

The military parade marked the 39th anniversar­y of the eight-year war with Iraq that began when Saddam Hussein invaded Iran in 1980.

Similar parades were held in many major cities and towns across the country including the port city of Bandar Abbas near the Strait of Hormuz.

State TV showed Iranian fast-attack boats, as well as air defence and military equipment. It also carried images of Iranian Revolution­ary Guard naval forces rappelling down the side of a ship.

The US navy has often complained about Guard fast boats and naval forces harassing shipping in the Gulf.

The chief of the powerful Revolution­ary Guard, Gen Hossein Salami, threatened to the “destructio­n of any aggressor’’ against Iran the day before.

Iran has long sought the evacuation of Western and US forces from Arab Gulf countries, seeing it as a potential threat to the Persian nation.

Mr Rouhani added that he will offer a regional peace plan during his visit to the UN this week. Fears of a wider regional conflagrat­ion have grown, as tensions between Iran and the US remain high over Tehran’s failing 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.

Recently, Iran has broken the deal’s limits on enrichment, uranium stockpiles and the use of advanced centrifuge­s, as it seeks to pressure Europe to offer it a way to sell its crude oil.

President Donald Trump unilateral­ly withdrew America from the deal over a year ago and re-imposed crippling sanctions on Iran.

 ?? AP ?? President Hassan Rouhani speaks at a military parade marking the 39th anniversar­y of the outset of the Iran-Iraq war outside Tehran yesterday.
AP President Hassan Rouhani speaks at a military parade marking the 39th anniversar­y of the outset of the Iran-Iraq war outside Tehran yesterday.

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