/ 15 October 2011

Iran’s supreme leader calls US accusations meaningless

Iran's Supreme Leader Calls Us Accusations Meaningless

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on Saturday that United States accusations that two Iranians planned to assassinate the Saudi Arabian ambassador to Washington were “meaningless”, state TV reported.

“A meaningless and nonsensical accusation has been raised against a few Iranians in America, which was made into an excuse to present the Islamic Republic as a supporter of terrorism,” Khamenei told a crowd in the western province of Kermanshah.

“It didn’t work, it won’t work,” he said.

Khameni, who is on a nine-day tour of the province, said the west repeatedly made unfounded accusations against Iran.

“They undertake such conspiracies on a regular basis … to no avail,” he said.

“They say we want to isolate Iran, [but] it’s they who have isolated themselves.”

Iran’s English-language Press TV quoted Foreign Ministry spokesperson Ramin Mehmanparast as saying the US allegations were “untrue and baseless”.

“It is a comedy show fabricated by America,” he said. The relationship between Iran and Saudi Arabia was based on “mutual respect” and could not be harmed by “fabricating such baseless claims”.

US authorities say they broke up a plot to bomb the Israeli and Saudi Arabian embassies in Washington and assassinate the Saudi ambassador.

The alleged plotters were identified as Manssor Arbabsiar and Gholam Shakuri — both originally from Iran — in a criminal complaint unsealed in federal court in New York City.

The US has said it held rare direct contacts with Iran over the allegations. An Iranian news agency quoted an Iranian official at the United Nations (UN) as denying that.

“I will again confirm that we did meet with the Iranians,” State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland said on Friday.

“They know that very well and any effort on their part to deny it speaks again to how truthful they are about any of these sorts of matters.”

Political tension between Iran and Saudi Arabia has been increasing since Saudi forces intervened in March to help Bahrain’s Sunni rulers crush pro-reform demonstrations backed by the Shi’ite majority.

Iran and the US are at odds over Tehran’s disputed nuclear programme which Washington and its allies say is a cover to build bombs.

Tehran denies this, saying it needs nuclear technology to generate electricity to meet its booming domestic need. The US and Israel, which Iran refuses to recognise, have not ruled out military action if diplomacy fails to resolve the row with Iran. — Reuters