Iran still seeking to kill Trump, Pompeo over Soleimani assassination, general says

Published February 25, 2023
Former US president Donald Trump (L) listens to then-US secretary of state Mike Pompeo during a Cabinet Meeting at the White House in Washington, DC, US, October 21, 2019. — AFP/File
Former US president Donald Trump (L) listens to then-US secretary of state Mike Pompeo during a Cabinet Meeting at the White House in Washington, DC, US, October 21, 2019. — AFP/File

An Iranian general on Friday warned that his country is still seeking to kill former US president Donald Trump and his secretary of state Mike Pompeo in revenge for assassinating top commander Qasem Soleimani.

Tehran has repeatedly vowed to avenge the killing of Soleimani, the head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ foreign operations, in a US drone strike on Baghdad airport in January 2020.

“We hope we can kill Trump, Pompeo, [former US general Kenneth] McKenzie and the military commanders who gave the order” to kill Soleimani, General Amirali Hajizadeh, the Guards’ aerospace unit commander, said on television late on Friday.

Trump had ordered the strike in response to a number of attacks on US interests in Iraq that his administration blamed on Iran.

Days later, Iran retaliated by firing missiles at a US airbase in Iraq that housed US troops. None were killed, but Washington said dozens suffered traumatic brain damage.

The United States and its allies have repeatedly expressed concerns about Iran’s ballistic missile programme as well as its “destabilising” role in the Middle East.

In his televised remarks, Hajizadeh said Iran was “now able to hit American ships at a distance of 2,000 kilometres”.

“We have set this limit of 2,000km out of respect for the Europeans and we hope that the Europeans show themselves worthy of this respect,” the Iranian general said.

On Saturday, Iranian state television aired a video of what it said was a newly unveiled “Paveh cruise missile with a range of 1,650km” developed by the Guards.

The official broadcaster reported on Friday that Iran was likely to provide Syria with the 15-Khordad surface-to-air missile system to “reinforce” its defensive capabilities.

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