Iran Guards vow to retaliate against any attack after Trump warning
After the United States, under President Trump, launched air strikes against Yemen's Huthi rebels and cautioned Iran against supporting the group, Iran's Revolutionary Guards responded on Sunday with a threat of "decisive" retaliation.
- World
- AFP
- Published Date: 12:09 | 16 March 2025
- Modified Date: 01:30 | 16 March 2025
Iran's Revolutionary Guards on Sunday threatened a "decisive" response to any attack, after US President Donald Trump ordered a wave of air strikes against Yemen's Huthi rebels and warned Tehran to stop backing the group.
On Saturday, Trump said the United States had launched "decisive and powerful military action" to end the Huthi threat to Red Sea shipping, and warned Iran's support for the rebels "must end immediately". A Huthi health official said the strikes had killed 31 people.
Iranian Guards chief Hossein Salami denounced Trump's threats in a televised speech on Sunday, adding that "Iran will not wage war, but if anyone threatens, it will give appropriate, decisive and conclusive responses".
The commander called the Huthis "the representative of the Yemenis", adding the group made its "strategic and operational decisions" independently.
In January 2020, during Trump's first term, the US killed the commander of the Guards' foreign operations arms, Qassem Soleimani, in a drone strike in Baghdad.
Days later, Iran retaliated by firing missiles at bases in Iraq housing American and other coalition troops. No US personnel were killed but Washington said dozens suffered traumatic brain injuries.
Earlier Sunday Iran's foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei "strongly condemned the brutal air strikes by the US" in a statement, denouncing them a "gross violation of the principles of the UN Charter".
Iran's top diplomat Abbas Araghchi said afterwards that Washington had "no authority" to dictate the Islamic republic's foreign policy.
"The United States Government has no authority, or business, dictating Iranian foreign policy," the foreign minister said on X, while urging the United States to stop the "killing of Yemeni people".
Araghchi said the time when Washington could dictate Tehran's foreign policy ended in 1979, when the Islamic revolution ousted the Western-backed shah.
The Huthis, who have controlled much of Yemen for more than a decade, are part of the "axis of resistance" of pro-Iran groups staunchly opposed to Israel and the United States.
The Yemeni rebels have attacked Israel and Red Sea shipping throughout the Gaza war in what they say is solidarity with Palestinians.
The US strikes on the Huthis are the first since Trump's return to the White House in January.
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