Iran denounces EP resolution, sanctions by U.S., UK, and Canada
TEHRAN- The Iranian Foreign Ministry has refuted the charges made against Tehran in a recent resolution passed by the European Parliament, and denounced the new sanctions that the U.S., the UK, and Canada have placed on a number of Iranian citizens and firms.
Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Nasser Kanaani harshly denounced in a statement released on Saturday the sanctions that the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada have placed on certain natural and legal members of the Iranian military services.
The spokesperson also attacked several European nations for adhering to the harsh policies of the U.S. administration by criticizing the European Parliament's decision against Iran.
He emphasized that Iran’s military capabilities are built in accordance with its needs to preserve territorial integrity and sovereignty, defend national security and interests, and provide a legitimate and deterrent defense against external threats and acts of aggression.
According to Kanaani, “The Islamic Republic of Iran is a major partner of the international community in providing peace and security to the region and the world, as well as in the fight against international terrorism.”
Contrary to the wishes of those imposing the sanctions, he said, the sanctions against Iran’s defense sector will actually present a chance to advance the nation’s military and defense capabilities and self-sufficiency, rather than weakening its resolve to strengthen its defense of its sovereignty, territorial integrity, and national interests.
“Many nations and governments, specifically in the West Asia region, hold out no hope of the role of the U.S. and its European allies in the establishment of stability and security in the region anymore,” the spokesman continued.
His remarks followed the announcement of further sanctions against Iran on Thursday by the U.S., UK, and Canada in response to its retaliatory strike against Israeli military targets on April 13.
The three states said that they will punish people and companies “closely involved” in Iran’s drone manufacture in order to target the country’s drone and missile sectors.
By a vote of 357 to 20, the European Parliament on Thursday passed a resolution denouncing Iran’s use of drones and missiles against the Israeli regime and urging the imposition of more penalties on Iranian organizations.
The Treasury Department and the State Department said on Tuesday that the United States government has imposed charges and penalties on four Iranian nationals in connection with an alleged multi-year cyber operation that targeted over a dozen American firms.
Additionally, the Treasury Department issued sanctions on two firms, Dadeh Afzar Arman and Mehrsam Andisheh Saz Nik, which it claimed employed the individual defendants and served as front organizations for Iran’s Revolution Guards cyber command.
The business targets, according to federal prosecutors in Manhattan, were mostly defense contractors with access to confidential data; other targets included an accountancy firm and a hotel company located in New York.
“These actors targeted more than a dozen U.S. companies and government entities through cyber operations, including spear phishing and malware attacks,” the U.S. Treasury Department said in a statement.
The defendants, according to the prosecution, used spearfishing—a tactic that entails deceiving email recipients into clicking on harmful links—and impersonating women to win over people’s trust in order to infect computers with malware.
The Israeli airstrike, which took place in Damascus’s Mezzeh district, resulted in the deaths of seven military advisors from the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC). Iranian officials have vowed a decisive response to what they described as a violation of international obligations and conventions.
Zahra Ershadi, Iran’s deputy permanent representative to the UN, told the 15-member Security Council that Iran reserves the right "to take a decisive response" to the attack, saying Israel violated the founding UN Charter, international law, and the inviolability of diplomatic and consular premises.
Israel’s crime clearly breached the basic principles of diplomatic and consular immunity, as well as the 1961 Convention on Diplomatic Relations, the 1963 Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, and the 1973 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Crimes, the diplomat stated.
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