Trump To Iran's President Rouhani: 'NEVER, EVER THREATEN' The U.S. Again

President
Trump issued a strongly worded all-caps, late-night tweet after Iranian
President Hassan Rouhani (right) said that war with Iran would be "the
mother of all wars and peace with Iran is the mother of all peace."
President Trump threatened
Iran in a late-night tweet on Sunday, responding angrily after Iranian
President Hassan Rouhani criticized Trump and warned the American president not
to "play with the
lion's tail" and that "war with Iran is the mother of all
wars."
Trump's tweet, posted in
all-capital letters: "NEVER, EVER THREATEN THE UNITED STATES AGAIN OR
YOU WILL SUFFER CONSEQUENCES THE LIKES OF WHICH FEW THROUGHOUT HISTORY HAVE
EVER SUFFERED BEFORE."
He declared, "WE ARE NO
LONGER A COUNTRY THAT WILL STAND FOR YOUR DEMENTED WORDS OF VIOLENCE &
DEATH. BE CAUTIOUS!"
At a gathering of Iranian
diplomats in Tehran on Sunday, according to Iran's state news agency,
Rouhani said, "America should know that peace with Iran is the mother of
all peace, and war with Iran is the mother of all wars."
Iran can defend itself,
Rouhani added, hinting that his country could also affect oil shipping through
the Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf if it were to come under attack.
As for how Trump's response
has been received, Iran's state news agency said the tweet was typical of the
American president's "bullying words."
NPR's Peter Kenyon reports
some people have pointed out that "you can't really do all-caps in
Persian, that doesn't quite translate. But no mistaking the threatening nature
of the message."
Also on Sunday, Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo launched a blistering attack on Iran in remarks at the Ronald
Reagan Presidential Library in California.
Pompeo accused Iran of
corruption and mismanagement at the highest levels and said the country had
backed terrorist attacks in Europe even as it tried to reassure EU members that
Iran will follow restrictions in their nuclear agreement.
In pointed remarks, Pompeo
said Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, controls a hedge fund
valued at $95 billion — a fund called the Setad (and on which Reuters did a
special report in 2013).
"That wealth is
untaxed, it is ill-gotten, and it is used as a 'slush fund' for the IRGC
[Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps]," Pompeo said. "The level of
corruption and wealth among Iranian leaders shows that Iran is run by something
that resembles the mafia more than a government."
Pompeo also tweeted a
succession of messages in Farsi, trying to bring his message directly to any
Iranians able to skirt their country's censors. In them, he said Iran's 1979
revolution had borne "bitter fruit."
Pompeo said, "After 40
years of tyranny, the proud Iranian people are not staying silent about their
government's abuses. We will not stay silent either."
In Tehran, Rouhani
questioned whether the U.S. can embrace Iran's people while fighting its
government, saying, "There were no times in the past like today that we
are witnessing the White House acting against the international law, Islamic
World and Palestinian people."
Trump's tweet prompted
questions about what the president meant by "consequences" for Iran, aside
from the economic sanctions the U.S. is already set to reimpose after leaving
the Iran nuclear deal.
On Monday morning, the White
House released this statement from national security adviser John Bolton: "I
spoke to the president over the last several days, and President Trump told me
that if Iran does anything at all to the negative, they will pay a price like
few countries have ever paid before."
The timing of Trump's heated
remarks also raised the question of why he decided to issue his tweet late Sunday
— after a week of negative
attention for his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin last
Monday, and the revelation that his former
attorney Michael Cohen recorded him in 2016 discussing payments to a
woman who claimed she had an affair with Trump.
"Donald Trump likes to
direct the media narrative, to control it," NPR's Mara Liasson said
on Morning Edition. "And he's gotten us all talking about Iran
this morning, instead of talking about Putin, or the investigation into Russian
interference."
Mara noted that Trump also
directed violent language toward North Korea — before meeting with Kim Jong Un
in Singapore. "Sometimes he likes to create a crisis, and then become the
hero of his own story and declare the crisis over," Liasson said.
In the case of North Korea,
she pointed out, the crisis was declared over despite any nuclear weapons being
dismantled.
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