Rouhani evokes Iran-Iraq war in call to defy US pressure

Iran's economy has been battered in recent months, in part due to Washington's withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear deal


Afp September 08, 2018
Iran's President Hassan Rouhani PHOTO: REUTERS

TEHRAN: Iran's President Hassan Rouhani evoked memories of the devastating Iran-Iraq war on Saturday to call for unity in the face of economic hardships and US pressure.

"Today, the government is on the front-lines. This is an economic, psychological and propaganda war," Rouhani said on state television.

"We had sweet days and we had hard days during the sacred defence," he said, using the official name for the war with Iraq which claimed up to two million lives between 1980 and 1988.

"But our nation never backed down. Now, too, our nation will not bow before the pressure of a new group in the White House."

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Iran's economy has been battered in recent months, in part due to Washington's withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear deal, which had lifted sanctions in return for curbs to its atomic programme.

Prices are rising and shortages are widespread, while Iran's currency has lost around 70% of its value against the dollar compared with a year ago.

Rouhani said that the United States is pressuring Iran and at the same time calling for negotiations "every day".

"Which one should we believe? Your messages, or your brutal acts? If you want the best for the Iranian people why are you pressuring them?"

Rouhani called for unity after weeks of pressure from both reformist and hard-line factions over his handling of the economic crisis.

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"We cannot fight America, the left and the right at the same time. We cannot fight on three fronts," he said.

The president also acknowledged the mounting economic pressure.

"[Yet] we cannot back down from our goals because of temporary difficulties. Remember those [war] days, our heartaches brought us to eventual victories."

Rouhani made the remarks during an event named after Mohammad-Ali Rajai, Iran's second president whose assassination in August 1981 was blamed on the political-militant group Mojahedin-e Khalq (MEK).

COMMENTS (1)

cautious | 5 years ago | Reply Ian lost a generation of it's youth in a war that lasted a decade - a war they fought to a standstill which could/should have been resolved years earlier. I doubt many Iranians have fond memories of that conflict.
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