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Iran
dismisses chance of US strike
Foreign Desk Report
TEHRAN—The head of Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards dismissed the
possibility of a U.S. military action against Iran and warned that his
forces would respond with an “even more decisive” strike if attacked, an
Iranian news agency reported Friday.
The comments by Gen. Mohammad Ali Jafari came after the United States
announced sweeping new sanctions against Iran focusing on the
Revolutionary Guards, a force that is tasked with protecting Iran’s
Islamic government and reports to the country’s supreme leader.
The sanctions step up tensions between the United States and Iran, where
many fear Washington is planning military action. The U.S. accuses the
Guards of supporting terrorism by backing Shiite militants in Iraq.
Washington also accuses Tehran of seeking to develop nuclear weapons and
has vowed to prevent it from doing so — though the Bush administration
insists it is seeking diplomatic means. Iran denies trying to build
weapons.
Asked about the possibility of an American strike on Iran, Jafari told
reporters late Thursday that, “These words are just exaggerations, and I
don’t consider them a threat,” the news agency ISNA reported. “The
Islamic Republic has the strength and power of its people’s faith. This
power is joined with experience, knowledge and technology in the realms
of defense. The enemy knows it cannot make any mistake, so these words
are just exaggeration,” he said.
The sanctions ban U.S. dealings with the extensive network of businesses
believed linked to the Guards — and put stepped-up pressure on
international banks to cut any ties with those firms.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini dismissed the new U.S.
measures as “worthless and ineffective” and said they were “doomed to
fail as before.”
Interior Minister Mostafa Pourmohammadi vowed that anyone who attacks
Iran would “find itself faced with a hard and crushing response,” though
he said the probability of American attack is “very small.”
“America knows well that while it can start such an attack, how it ends
will not be in Washington’s hands, and such an attack will lead to
America’s collapse,” he told journalists during a visit to Kuwait on
Thursday, according to the Iranian state news agency IRNA. China, a key
ally of Iran, warned Friday that the sanctions could increase tensions
over Iran’s nuclear program.
“Dialogue and negotiations are the best approach to resolving the
Iranian nuclear issue,” the ministry said in a brief statement in
response to a question from The Associated Press. “To impose new
sanctions on Iran at a time when international society and the Iranian
authorities are working hard to find a solution to the Iranian nuclear
issue can only complicate the issue.”
Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni was due to visit China over the
weekend to lobby for intensified U.N. sanctions against Iran, the
Israeli Embassy said Friday.
Washington has already won two U.N. Security Council sanctions
resolutions.
Despite their government’s insistence that U.S. and U.N. sanctions
aren’t causing any pain, some leading Iranians have begun to say
publicly that the pressure does hurt. And on Tehran’s streets, people
are increasingly worried over the economic pinch.
Iran’s economy is struggling, with dramatic price rises this year. The
cost of housing and basic foodstuffs like vegetables have doubled or
even quadrupled. The government also has imposed unpopular fuel
rationing in an attempt to reduce expensive subsidies for imported
gasoline.
The sanctions have heightened resentment of the United States among some
in the public. But they are also fueling criticism among Iranian
politicians that President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is mismanaging the crisis
with hard-line stances that worsen the standoff with the West.
Ahmadinejad and his allies are likely counting on sanctions to rally
Iranians against the United States.
“Hard-liners in Tehran were looking forward for the sanctions. It helps
them hide their incompetence behind the embargo,” said political
commentator Saeed Laylaz.
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