Iran's president threatens response to new US sanctions

Published July 19, 2017
President Hassan Rouhani speaks during a cabinet meeting in Tehran. —AP
President Hassan Rouhani speaks during a cabinet meeting in Tehran. —AP

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said Wednesday that Tehran would “respond appropriately” to new US sanctions but that Iran remained committed to its nuclear deal with world powers.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran will always stick to its international commitments,” Rouhani said in a televised cabinet meeting.

But if the US wants “to press forward with new sanctions under any pretext... the great nation of Iran will respond appropriately,” he said.

“We will not forgive violations by the Americans and we will stand against them.” His comments came a day after the US and Iran traded tit-for-tat sanctions over the Islamic republic's ballistic missile programme.

The State Department slapped sanctions on 18 individuals and entities in Iran, hours after the White House admitted Tehran was adhering to the 2015 agreement.

Iran hit back with its own sanctions against “American people and entities that have acted against the Iranian people and other Muslim peoples of the region.” Rouhani on Wednesday accused Washington of “duplicity”.

“On one hand they send official reports to Congress verifying that Iran has been completely loyal to the nuclear deal,” Rouhani said.

“On other hand they seek new sanctions under various excuses against logic (and) the spirit and text” of the accord, he said.

Missile funding

Iran's parliament on Tuesday voted to streamline a bill that would increase funding for the country's missile programme and Revolutionary Guards in response to Washington's “adventurism” in the region.

An overwhelming majority of lawmakers voted to prioritise the motion that would see an additional $260 million allocated to the missile programme and the same amount to the elite Revolutionary Guards' foreign operations wing, the Quds Force.

Rouhani accused his American counterpart Donald Trump of breaking international deals signed by his predecessor Barack Obama on Cuba, North Korea and climate change.

The Iranian president said Washington was pushing Iran to “abandon its commitments” and that the US was “worried over improved economic relations between Iran and Asia and Europe”.

“We are happy that so far the 5+1 (world powers) have stood strongly to protect” the nuclear deal, he said. Later in the day, Revolutionary Guards chief Mohammad Ali Jafari warned the US of Iran's growing power.

“Iran's missile power is advancing at a great speed in air, land and sea and this is a cornerstone of our policy,” he said in comments on the force's Sepahnews website.

Before imposing “sanctions on defence and the Revolutionary Guards”, the US should close its bases within 1,000 kilometres of Iran, he added.

Iran's Gulf Arab neighbours to the west and Afghanistan to the east host several major US military bases. Jafari warned US “miscalculation” could have a “high cost”.

“The domain of the Islamic revolution's influence has expanded so much” that Iran is active close to American interests in many parts of the world, he said.

Such influence, he added, is partly the result of Iran's military strength and “the roar of the missiles”.

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