Donald Trump offers victims solace
Iran
terror attacks: Donald Trump offers victims solace, but takes a swipe at Tehran
Washington: President
Donald Trump on Wednesday offered solace to the victims of the twin terrorist
attacks in Iran while suggesting Tehran bears some culpability, saying
"states that sponsor terrorism risk falling victim to the evil they
promote."
Hours after
conciliatory comments from his state department, the president said in a one-paragraph
statement that the United States grieves and prays for the innocent victims of
the assault against Iran's Parliament and the shrine of Iran's revolutionary
leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, that killed at least 12 people. The
Islamic State group claimed responsibility.
Trump added his
broadside against Iran, which the US has designated as a state sponsor of
terrorism since 1984.
"We underscore
that states that sponsor terrorism risk falling victim to the evil they
promote," he said.
State department
spokeswoman Heather Nauert had said the US is sending thoughts and prayers to
the Iranian people following the attacks.
"The depravity
of terrorism has no place in a peaceful, civilised world," said Nauert,
who said the US is expressing condolences to the victims and their families.
The US statement of
solidarity with the attack's victims is notable because of the deep distrust
between the US and Iran. The two countries don't maintain diplomatic relations,
and the Trump administration has emphasised the need to counter Iran's influence.
The distrust of Iran
was evident on Wednesday when shortly after the condemnation, Republicans and
Democrats in Congress acted in a procedural vote to move forward on a new set
of sanctions on Iran, including on its elite Revolutionary Guards. The strong
bipartisan vote was 92-7.
The bill would impose
mandatory sanctions on people involved in Iran's ballistic missile program and
anyone who does business with them. The measure also would apply terrorism
sanctions to the country's Revolutionary Guards and enforce an arms embargo.
A few senators
pleaded for a delay until next week of the previously scheduled vote in light
of the attacks in Iran.
"Let us tell the
people of Iran that while we have serious disagreements with them on a number
of issues, that today when they are mourning, when they are dealing with the
shock of a terrorist attack, today is not the day to go forward with this piece
of legislation," Senator Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., said.
Senator Chris Murphy,
D-Conn., also pushed for a delay, but Republicans and Democrats pressed ahead.
The bill is a
"carefully crafted response to Iran's ongoing aggression in the Middle
East," Senator Bob Menendez, D-N.J., said.
Last month, the
Foreign Relations Committee backed the measure despite concerns from former
Secretary of State John Kerry and several Democrats that it could nonetheless
lead to the unravelling of the nuclear accord negotiated by the Obama
administration.
Kerry cautioned
lawmakers to "tread carefully" in pushing ahead with new sanctions against
Iran in the wake of President Hassan Rouhani's re-election to another four-year
term. Rouhani is a political moderate who scored a resounding victory over a
hard-line opponent.
Senator Bob Corker of
Tennessee, the committee's Republican chairman and one of the bill's sponsors,
said he recently reviewed top-secret intelligence that detailed Tehran's
support for terrorism and other destabilising actions.
"It is
astounding what Iran continues to do around the world," said Corker,
urging his colleagues to confront the threat Tehran poses.
In exchange for Iran
rolling back its nuclear program, the US and other world powers agreed to
suspend wide-ranging oil, trade and financial sanctions that had choked the
Iranian economy. As part of the July 2015 multinational accord, Iran also
regained access to frozen assets held abroad.
Israel and
congressional Republicans have long assailed the agreement as a windfall to
Iran. They've argued the deal only delayed Iran's pursuit of nuclear weapons
and failed to allow the kind of inspections of its atomic sites that would
guarantee Tehran was not cheating. Lifting economic sanctions saved Iran's
economy, GOP lawmakers added and allowed the country to funnel more money to
terrorist groups.
Yet the nuclear deal
remains in place despite Trump's pledge during the presidential campaign to
discard or renegotiate the pact. Instead, the state department took a key step
last week toward preserving the pact by issuing a waiver to keep the sanctions
from snapping back into place. And the Trump administration notified Congress
last month that Iran is complying with the terms of the agreement.
Senate
majority leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said that as the Iran legislation
moves forward, lawmakers will have an opportunity to offer amendments that
would authorise new sanctions on Russia.

Post a Comment