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Ayatollah Khamenei/AFP

World

US demands Iran be punished for Saudi envoy plot

WASHINGTON, Oct 13 – The United States urged the world to take concerted action against Iran on Wednesday for an alleged plot to assassinate the Saudi ambassador, which Hillary Clinton termed a “dangerous escalation.”

Tehran accused the United States of fabricating the charges to distract from domestic economic woes amid growing anti-Wall Street protests, and some experts did voice doubts that the plot was hatched by Iran’s leaders.

As US diplomats began consultations behind closed doors at the United Nations, Secretary of State Clinton rallied support for tough new measures against Iran, although it was not immediately clear what they might be.

The US Treasury slapped sanctions on Mahan Air, a Tehran-based commercial airline accused of ferrying around the Middle East members of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps implicated in the plot.

The airline’s assets in the United States were frozen and US citizens were barred from doing business with the firm.

“We call upon other nations to join us in condemning this threat to international peace and security,” Clinton urged.

This plot was “a flagrant violation of international and US law, and a dangerous escalation of the Iranian government’s longstanding use of political violence and sponsorship of terrorism.

“This kind of reckless act undermines international norms and the international system. Iran must be held accountable for its actions.”

US President Barack Obama called King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia to reaffirm ties in the wake of what the White House called an “Iranian-directed conspiracy to assassinate the Saudi Arabian Ambassador in Washington, DC.”

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“The president and the king agreed that this plot represents a flagrant violation of fundamental international norms, ethics, and law,” the White House statement said.

Iran strongly denied any involvement in what the US says was a plot by the Iranian Revolutionary Guards’ elite Quds force to kill the Saudi ambassador by hiring assassins from a Mexican drug cartel for $1.5 million.

Announcing the stunning news on Tuesday, the US authorities named two principal suspects: Manssor Arbabsiar, a used-car salesman who is a naturalized US citizen, and Gholam Shakuri, said to be an Iran-based member of the Quds Force.

Shakuri is believed to be in Iran, while Arbabsiar, 56, was arrested on September 29 at New York’s John F. Kennedy airport and appeared in court Tuesday in Manhattan. His lawyer said he would plead not guilty, if charged.

The Treasury Department on Tuesday froze the US assets of Shakuri and Arbabsiar, and three others, Qasem Soleimani, Hamed Abdollahi and Abdul Reza Shahlai, who it said were senior Quds Force officers involved in the plot.

The complaint says Arbabsiar — with the approval of Shakuri — facilitated the wiring in August of approximately $100,000 into a US bank account as a down-payment for the assassination attempt.

When the undercover US agent posing as the would-be assassin noted that others, including American senators, might be killed if the attack was carried out at a particular restaurant, Arbabsiar allegedly said: “No big deal.”

Iran, which faces four rounds of UN sanctions over its nuclear program, has sent a letter of protest to the Security Council accusing Washington of “warmongering.”

And in a mass rally carried on state television, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, predicted that the Occupy Wall Street anti-corporate movement gripping New York would grow to “mark the downfall of the West.”

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France and Britain agreed to back US demands for further action at the United Nations, but criticism was notably muted from vital veto-wielding Security Council members Russia and China.

Russia’s UN ambassador Vitaly Churkin called the case “rather bizarre,” while China was yet to comment at all.

The US administration will be sending delegations to Beijing and Moscow to give details of the investigation, diplomats said.

The Sunni-dominated Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), which groups Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, said the alleged plot was “severely harmful” to Gulf-Iranian relations.

Jordan also strongly condemned the alleged plot, with Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh in Amman saying Saudi stability and security were “a red line,” the official Petra news agency reported.

A former chief of Saudi intelligence, Prince Turki al-Faisal, said the evidence pointing to Tehran’s involvement was “overwhelming” and stated: “Somebody in Iran will have to pay the price.”

However, some experts remained skeptical that it involved or had the approval of high-level officials in Tehran.

“It does not look like the ordinary way that Iran would carry out an assassination,” said Rasool Nafisi, an Iranian-American scholar who studies the Revolutionary Guards. “Normally they would have a group planning this kind of operation.

“I suspect this is not the work of the Iranian regime, when you look at the choice of target, timing of action and type of actor.”

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