Iran issues warrant for Trump in general’s death
Iran has issued an arrest warrant for President Donald Trump and 35 other people it says were involved in a drone strike that killed a top Iranian general in Baghdad this year and has asked for international help in detaining them, according to Iranian news reports.
Tehran’s top prosecutor, Ali al-Qasimehr, said in the reports that those sought were involved in “directing the assassination” of Gen. Qassem Soleimani, who was killed with other Iranian and Iraqi officials at the Baghdad airport Jan. 3.
The comments came during a meeting with judicial figures, according to the semiofficial ISNA news agency, and al-Qasimehr added that Iran intended to pursue prosecution of Trump even after his presidential term ends.
No information was immediately available on the other people sought by Iran, but the ISNA report noted that “judicial authorities have ordered arrest warrants for them and a notice of red alert through the international police.” It also said that a request for cooperation had been handed over to Interpol, an international police organization that includes both the United States and Iran as members.
Interpol said in an emailed statement that under its founding constitution, “it is strictly forbidden for the organization to undertake any intervention or activities of a political, military, religious or racial character.”
“Therefore, if or when any such requests were to be sent to the General Secretariat, in accordance with the provisions of our constitution and rules, Interpol would not consider requests of this nature,” the statement read, though it did not specifically address the Iranian request.
While the organization is responsible for coordinating international policing efforts, it does not have the authority to make arrests or force nations to arrest people on behalf of other governments.
The organization’s “red alert” notices are not arrest warrants. They are sent out as a “request to law enforcement worldwide to locate and provisionally arrest a person pending extradition, surrender, or similar legal action,” according to Interpol.
Soleimani, a powerful Iranian commander, was killed in a U.S. drone strike at the Baghdad airport in January, increasing tensions between the United States and Iran and nearly leading to war.
Sanam Vakil, a researcher on Iran at Chatham House, a London-based research institute, said it was unsurprising that Iran had chosen to take the largely symbolic step of calling for warrants and said that the killing of Soleimani had become part of Iran’s “narrative of U.S. injustice.”
“They haven’t forgotten Jan. 3, and Soleimani is a really important figure within the conservative establishment, and really within the broader population,” Vakil said. “So being able to push back symbolically using international agencies, there might be a subtle message there that this isn’t going away.”