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Iran’s First VP Dismisses Hostile Posturing by US

Iran’s First VP Dismisses Hostile Posturing by US
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Iran's first vice president dismissed recent anti-Iran posturing by the US, saying "threadbare" accusations against Iran are aimed by Washington at scaring away investors.

Iran’s First VP Dismisses Hostile Posturing by US

The administration of US President Donald Trump had recently ratcheted up its rhetoric against Iran. Trump himself, War Secretary James Mattis, and White House national security adviser Michael Flynn had all recently made anti-Iran comments. Mattis on Saturday called Iran "the single biggest state sponsor of terrorism in the world."

Reacting on the same day, Eshaq Jahangiri, the Iranian first vice president, said accusations that Iran supports terrorism had gone threadbare.

"The Iranian nation and authorities do not attach the least value to these remarks," he said.

Had it not been for Iran, Jahangiri said, Syria would have today fallen to the Takfiri Daesh [Arabic acronym for "ISIS" / "ISIL"] terrorist group, "Arab countries would have been encircled by Daesh, and no one would have known what al-Qaeda would be doing in Afghanistan."

He said Iran was present wherever it was necessary to help restore stability.

"Over the recent years, wherever they planted terrorism to disrupt the region, the country that was present on the battlefield against terror was the Islamic Republic of Iran," he said.

Pointing to the anti-Iran rhetoric by the US officials, Jahangiri said, "These accusations against Iran have become [mere] rehashes, and even the accuser is ashamed of making the claim that Iran is a state sponsor of terrorism."

The senior Iranian official said the accusations are meant to slow down Iran's progress by dissuading domestic and foreign investors.

On Friday, the US administration also imposed new sanctions against Iran over a recent missile test by the Islamic Republic and its "continued support for terrorism."

Jahangiri said the parties imposing the sanctions on Iran have witnessed the difference between when they impose bans and when they engage in interaction with the Islamic Republic.

"If a language of respect is used to talk to the Iranian nation and if issues are resolved through dialog and negotiation, then, as stated by President [Hassan Rouhani], the outcome could be a win for all."

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

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