Contact Us

Iranian president calls Israel 'a tumour' troubling the Middle East'

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani lashed out at Israel on Saturday, calling his country's regional nemesis a "tumour" affecting the Middle East. "One of the worst results of World War II was the formation of this illegitimate regime, named Israel, which led to the formation of a tumour in the Middle East," Rouhani said during a conference in Tehran.

Agencies and A News WORLD
Published November 24,2018
Subscribe

Iran's President Hassan Rouhani on Saturday called Israel a "cancerous tumor" established by Western countries to advance their interests in the Middle East.

Iran's leaders frequently condemn Israel and predict its demise, but Rouhani, a relative moderate, rarely employs such rhetoric.

Addressing an annual Islamic Unity Conference on Saturday, Rouhani said "one of the ominous results of World War II was the formation of a cancerous tumor in the region." He went on to refer to Israel as a "fake regime" set up by Western countries.

What's worse, he said, was that the United States prizes its relationship with Israel and the country's security more than anything else in the region. That gives Israel carte blanche to do whatever it wants, including mistreating the Palestinian people, he said.

Rouhani said the United States cultivates close ties with "regional Muslim nations" to protect Israel, an apparent reference to Iran's regional rival Saudi Arabia and the kingdom's Sunni Arab allies. He said bowing to American pressure amounts to "treason."

He added, however, that Iran was prepared to defend Saudi Arabia from "terrorism and superpowers."

"We do consider you as a brother," he said. "We do consider the people of Mecca and Medina our brothers," he added, referring to Islam's two holiest cities, in Saudi Arabia.

Saudi Arabia cut diplomatic ties with Iran nearly three years ago after Iranian protesters stormed its diplomatic posts in Iran in response the kingdom's execution of a prominent Shiite cleric. The two countries support opposite sides in the wars in Syria and Yemen.