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Iran says new US sanctions illegitimate
Iran says new US sanctions illegitimate
Iran
on Monday says new US curbs on the Islamic Republic's ballistic missile
program were illegitimate, vowing to continue developing its
conventional military deterrent.
The United States imposed
sanctions on 11 companies and individuals on Sunday for supplying Iran's
ballistic missile program in a move delayed by over two weeks so as not
to endanger this weekend's release of US prisoners.
The new measures also came after the lifting of far more comprehensive nuclear sanctions.
"The
Islamic Republic will respond to these aggravating and propagandistic
measures by pursuing its legal missile program stronger than before and
developing its defensive capabilities," a foreign ministry statement
said.
Iran conducted a ballistic missile test in October, which
the United Nations called a breach of a resolution prohibiting the
Islamic Republic from developing missiles capable of delivering nuclear
warheads. Iran insists the missile was designed to carry a conventional
payload.
Foreign ministry spokesman Hossein Jaberi Ansari said
Washington's sales of weaponry to allies in the Middle East, worth tens
of billions of dollars each year, was used to commit "war crimes against
Palestinian, Lebanese and most recently Yemeni citizens".
"The US sanctions against Iran's ballistic missile program ... have no legal or moral legitimacy," he said.
Hardline
newspapers Kayhan and Vatan-e-Emrooz splashed the news on their front
pages, crowding out a triumphal speech by President Hassan Rouhani, who
on Sunday hailed the lifting of the nuclear sanctions.
"Sanctions are back!" ran the Kayhan headline.
The
article pointed out that Tehran's top authority, Supreme Leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, had said new sanctions under any pretext would
constitute a breach of the nuclear deal.
Originally published as Iran says new US sanctions illegitimate