Iran’s Supreme Leader condemns the US over Ukraine emergency

John Smith
2 min readMar 2, 2022

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Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said, on Tuesday, the conflict in Ukraine ought to be halted and denounced the “mafia-like system” of the United States of making the contention, Reuters reports.

Russia, whose troops attacked Ukraine last week, is an essential accomplice for Iran, which has been under Western assents for quite a long time. While Tehran and Washington have been enemies for quite a long time, Iran and Russia have developed exchange ties and have been partners in the Syrian clash.

“The US system makes emergencies, lives off of emergencies, and feeds on different emergencies on the planet. Ukraine is one more survivor of this approach,” Khamenei said in a broadcast discourse.

“In my view, Ukraine is a survivor of the emergencies devised by the United States,” he said. “There are two illustrations to be learned here. States which rely upon the help of the US and Western powers need to realize they can’t confide in such nations.”

Khamenei censured Washington and other Western countries as talks arrived at a basic stage in Vienna among Iran and world powers regarding resuscitating a 2015 atomic arrangement.

Notwithstanding progress in the discussions, the key staying point in Tehran needs the issue of uranium follows found at a few old yet undeclared locales in Iran to be dropped and shut everlastingly, an Iranian authority told Reuters.

Tehran objects to claims by the UN atomic guard dog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), that Iran neglected to completely clarify the uranium follows.

England’s lead arbitrator at the discussions, Stephanie Al-Qaq, protected the IAEA and said Britain, France, and Germany went against meddling in its work.

“We will continuously dismiss any endeavor to think twice about autonomy,” she composed on Twitter.

Iran said, on Monday, endeavors to resuscitate the agreement could succeed in the event that the United States took a political choice to fulfill Tehran’s excess needs, as long periods of dealings enter what one Iranian representative called a “presently or never” stage.

A lot is on the line, in light of the fact that the disappointment of 10 months of talks could convey the gamble of a new provincial conflict, more brutal assents on Iran by the West, and proceeded with up tension on world oil costs previously stressed by the Ukraine struggle.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry representative has said the excess issues incorporated the degree to which approvals would be moved back and giving ensures that the United States wouldn’t stop the settlement once more.

All gatherings associated with the discussions say progress has been made toward the rebuilding of the agreement to control Tehran’s atomic program in return for sanctions alleviation, which the United States deserted in 2018. Yet, both Tehran and Washington have said there are still a few huge contrasts to survive.

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John Smith
John Smith

Written by John Smith

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