Wednesday January 15, 2025

Trump's anti-Iran remarks "ignorant and spiteful": Rouhani

Published : 21 Sep 2017, 00:55

  othrs   
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani addresses the 72nd session of United Nations General Assembly on the second day of the general debate at the UN headquarters in New York, Sept. 20, 2017. Photo Xinhua.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani on Wednesday censured U.S. President Donald Trump's recent anti-Iran speech as "ignorant and spiteful" at the UN General Assembly.

Trump's "rhetoric against Iran was ignorant and spiteful, abundant with false information and baseless allegations," Rouhani said, addressing the 72nd session of the UN General Assembly.

During his speech at the UN General Assembly on Tuesday, Trump accused Iran of "destabilizing" the Middle East region and "supporting terror."

Besides, Trump called the Iran nuclear deal, reached during former President Barack Obama's administration, "an embarrassment" for the United States, indicating that he may not recertify the deal at its mid-October deadline.

Trump blasted the deal as "one of the worst and one-sided transactions the United States has ever entered into."

According to the Iran nuclear deal, or formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), all nuclear-related sanctions imposed on Iran will be removed if the country is proved to abide by the deal over the next few years.

In reaction, Rouhani dismissed the U.S. "destabilization" allegations and supported the JCPOA as an international accord.

"Today, we are on the frontlines of fighting terror and religious extremism in the Middle east; not for sectarian or ethnic reasons, but for an ethical, humanitarian causes," he said.

Iran does not seek to restore its ancient empire, impose its official religion on others, or export its revolution to other countries through the force of arms, he pointed out.

Moreover, Iran's nuclear deal is the outcome of two years of intensive multilateral negotiations, overwhelmingly applauded by the international community and endorsed by the Security Council as a part of Resolution 2231, Rouhani said.

"The JCPOA does not belong to one or two countries. It is a UNSC document, which belongs to the entire international community," Rouhani said, adding that Iran would respond to any breach of the JCPOA.

The Iranian president also draw the global attention to what he referred to as "threats" posed to the Middle East region by the nuclear arms at the disposal of Israel.