Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Iran’s president vows to avenge killing

- ISABEL DEBRE Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Nasser Karimi of The Associated Press.

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Iran’s hard-line president vowed revenge Monday over the killing of a senior Revolution­ary Guard member gunned down in the heart of Tehran the day before.

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi hailed Col. Hassan Sayyad Khodaei as a martyr and blamed “the hand of global arrogance,” a reference to the United States and its allies, including Israel, for his slaying.

There has been no claim of responsibi­lity for the killing carried out Sunday afternoon by two unidentifi­ed gunmen on a motorbike.

They shot Khodaei five times in a car, an unarmored SAIPA Pride. But the style of the brazen attack bore the hallmarks of previous slayings in Iran blamed on Israel.

“I have no doubt that revenge against the criminals for the blood of this martyr is assured,” Raisi said at the airport before leaving Tehran for a state visit to the sultanate of Oman.

The Guard identified Khodaei as a “defender of the shrine,” a reference to Iranians who fight against the extremist Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq within the elite Quds Force that oversees operations abroad. Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency described his role on Monday as “managing the advisory activities” of the Quds Force in the Levant region, without elaboratin­g.

While Iran has yet to offer any definitive biographic informatio­n on Khodaei, Israeli media on Sunday night ran simultaneo­us stories alleging Khodaei had organized plots against Israeli diplomats, businesspe­ople and other foreign officials abroad.

The news reports, all of which ran without attributio­n, suggest Israeli intelligen­ce officials briefed journalist­s on the Iranian colonel. There was no official comment from the Israeli government.

While Tehran has reacted with condemnati­on, officials have not acknowledg­ed Khodaei’s particular loss to the Guard. Iran will hold a funeral ceremony today, local media reported.

The killing of Khodaei comes at a fraught time for the country.

Negotiatio­ns with the Biden administra­tion aimed at restoring the tattered nuclear agreement remain deadlocked, apparently over whether to lift the U.S. terrorism designatio­n on the Guard. The European Union’s envoy for the nuclear talks visited Tehran earlier this month in hopes of finding a compromise, apparently without result.

With Israel’s support, former President Donald Trump withdrew America from Tehran’s nuclear accord with world powers in 2018 and re-imposed sanctions.

The strangleho­ld of U.S. sanctions along with government mismanagem­ent has led to soaring inflation, high youth unemployme­nt and rising poverty. Raisi’s administra­tion has struggled to halt the economic tailspin.

With pressures mounting in the wake of Russia’s war on Ukraine and global supply chain snarls, the Iranian government last month slashed subsidies for imported wheat and raised prices as much as 300% for other food staples.

As the Iranian currency, the rial, shrivels in value and people watch their incomes diminish with surging prices, strikes over salary disputes among bus drivers and teachers have gained traction. Security forces have arrested protesters and officials have downplayed the unrest.

The sultanate of Oman gave Raisi a royal welcome Monday as he touched down in Muscat. He met Sultan Haitham bin Tariq Al Said to boost relations with the neutral country.

Officials signed a raft of preliminar­y deals in the oil and gas sector, as well as agricultur­e and transporta­tion.

Ahead of the visit, the countries agreed to revive an undersea gas pipeline project to carry Iranian gas to the sultanate, long hamstrung by sanctions and other disputes, Iranian media reported.

As Iran’s global isolation deepens, Raisi has stressed the importance of shifting the country’s foreign policy focus away from the West and toward its regional neighbors.

 ?? (AP/Vahid Salemi) ?? Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi speaks before departing Tehran’s Mehrabad airport Monday for a trip to Oman.
(AP/Vahid Salemi) Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi speaks before departing Tehran’s Mehrabad airport Monday for a trip to Oman.

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