Iran’s Khamenei warns over military strike, oil embargo

February 03, 2012 | Politics & Social Unrest

iran_supreme_leader_ayatollah_ali_khamenei

Iran’s Supreme Leader warned Friday that any attack on the Islamic Republic would have negative consequences for the United States.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s remarks, which was forceful but familiar, came a day after U.S. Secretary of  Defence Leon Panetta suggested Israel could strike Iran as soon as April if international sanctions remain insufficient impetus to coax Iran away from its clandestine nuclear work.

“Threatening Iran and attacking Iran will harm America,” Ayatollah Khamenei told worshipers in Tehran after Friday prayers, according to the Reuters news agency. “Sanctions will not have any impact on our determination to continue our nuclear course.”

The exact phrasing used by Khamenei is subject to translation, and a Farsi speaker says the word he chose may not be as strong as “harm.” The Supreme Leader may be more accurately quoted as saying an attack on Iran would be “detrimental” to the U.S., or would “not help” the American position.

“In response to threats of oil embargo and war, we have our own threats to impose at the right time,” Khamenei continued in his televised address, offering no further explanation as to what measures Iran might take.

In the address, Khamenei also said Iran will help any nation or group that confronts the “cancer” Israel.

Iranian officials have consistently reacted defiantly to indications by the U.S. and Israel that they might at some point take military action against Iranian nuclear facilities.

But any statement by Iran’s Supreme Leader, who has final say on all matters of state, makes it all the more unlikely that Tehran will switch tack.

Khamenei also said that Iran had assisted militant groups like the Lebanese Hezbollah and the Palestinian Hamas — a well-known policy, but one that Iranian leaders rarely state explicitly.

“We have intervened in anti-Israel matters, and it brought victory in the 33-day war by Hezbollah against Israel in 2006, and in the 22-day war,” between Hamas and Israel in the Gaza Strip.

Israel’s large-scale military incursion against Hamas in 2008-2009 in Gaza ended in a cease-fire, with Israel claiming to have inflicted heavy damage on the militant organization. The war in Lebanon ended with a U.N.-brokered truce that sent thousands of Lebanese troops and international peacekeepers into southern Lebanon to prevent another outbreak.

“From now on, in any place, if any nation or any group confronts the Zionist regime, we will endorse and we will help. We have no fear expressing this,” said Khamenei.

He said Israel is a “cancerous tumour that should be cut and God willing, will be cut.”

The remarks are a rare direct acknowledgment by an Iranian leader of  Tehran’s intervention against Israel in armed conflicts. Iran has usually said in the past that it offers political support to Hezbollah and the Palestinian groups.

Khamenei also said that the U.S. will suffer defeat and lose standing in the region, if  Washington decides to use military force to stop the country’s nuclear program.

“Iran will not withdraw. Then what happens?” asked Khamenei. “In conclusion, the West’s hegemony and threats will be discredited” in the Middle East. “The hegemony of Iran will be promoted. In fact, this will be in our service.”

Both U.S. and Israel have not ruled out a military option against Iran’s nuclear facilities, which the West suspects are aimed at developing weapons technology.

Iran says its nuclear activities have geared toward peaceful purposes such as power generation and medical isotopes.

Another potential military flashpoint is the Strait of  Hormuz at the mouth of the Persian Gulf. Iran has threatened to close the strait in response to U.S. and EU sanctions targeting the country’s oil exports.