- TEHRAN — Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has denounced as "a lie" US
President Donald Trump's recent claim that he sought to use power to ensure
peace, citing the Trump administration's support for the killings in the Gaza
Strip.
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- Khamenei made the remarks on Saturday at a meeting with a
large number of teachers in Tehran, while reacting to Trump's comments on
wanting peace in the region during his tour of West Asia earlier this week,
according to footage of his remarks published on his website.
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- "The recent remarks of the US President during his
visit to the region are a disgrace to the speaker and a disgrace to the
American nation," he said during a public event on Saturday in Tehran,
according to Iran's state news agency IRNA.
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- "Trump said he wants to use power for peace; he lied.
He and other US officials, and US administrations have used power to support
the killings in Gaza, for warmongering in any place they can, and to back their
mercenaries," the Iranian leader said.
Also read: Trump says he is 'not frustrated' with Netanyahu over war in Gaza
- Khamenei reiterated his threats against Israel, calling it
"the Zionist regime," and "a dangerous and malignant cancerous
tumor in this region (that) must and will be uprooted."
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- He expressed confidence that with the determination and
efforts of regional countries, the US must and will leave the region, Xinhua
news agency reported.
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- Earlier this week, Trump visited three Gulf Arab states --
Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates, which are located in West
Asia.
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- In remarks in the Saudi capital Riyadh on Tuesday, Trump
described Iran as the "most destructive force" in the Middle East and
accused it of fueling regional instability, vowing that the US would never let
Iran obtain a nuclear weapon.
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- However, Trump wants to avoid a deal with Iran that
resembles the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), which was reached
during Barack Obama's presidency and included the European Union and China.
Trump withdrew from the JCPOA in 2018 and reimposed sanctions on Tehran. The
following year, Iran stopped complying with the broken deal.
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- Iran's Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi said on
Saturday that the country won't renounce its right to a peaceful nuclear
program, but guaranteed good faith in negotiations with the US
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- The trading of accusations between Tehran and Washington
comes as the two sides have held four rounds of indirect talks on Tehran's
nuclear program and the lifting of US sanctions over the past weeks, with
mediation from Oman.