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Iran says no plans to increase missile range, rejects talks with Trump

Iran says no plans to increase missile range, rejects talks with Trump
June 20, 2018
LONDON (Reuters) - Iran has no plans to extend the range of its missiles since their 2,000-km (1,240-mile) reach is enough to protect the country, the Revolutionary Guards commander said , amid mounting US pressure over Tehran’s missile programme. Iran’s government again ruled out negotiations with US President Donald Trump over Tehran’s military capabilities and regional influence. “We have the scientific ability to increase our missile range but it is not our current policy since most of the enemies’ strategic targets are already within this 2,000-km range. This range is enough to protect the Islamic Republic,” Major General Mohammad Ali Jafari was quoted as saying by Tasnim news agency. Jafari said that previous negotiations with the United States about Iran’s nuclear programme were “an exception,” and called Iranian politicians and activists who have favoured fresh talks with Trump “traitors and anti-revolutionaries”. On Saturday, over 100 activists associated with the moderate and reformist camps in Iranian politics welcomed Trump’s deal with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un envisaging a complete denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula. In a statement published by Iranian media, the activists urged Tehran to start direct negotiations with Washington “with no preconditions” to resolve decades of enmity between the two countries dating to Iran’s 1979.
Jafari rejected their call. “The North Korean leader was a revolutionary .That is why he surrendered, but we will not do the same,” he was quoted by the semi-official Fars news agency as saying. Iranian government spokesman Mohammad Bagher Nobakht echoed Jafari’s remarks. “There are no grounds or logic to talk to such a person (Trump). Public opinion would not welcome that either,” Nobakht was quoted as saying by ISNA news agency. Since US withdrawal from the deal, European signatories France, Britain and Germany have been scrambling to ensure Iran retains enough economic benefits to persuade it not to pull out. Iran’s nuclear chief said that Europe’s proposals to salvage the deal were not satisfying for Tehran. IRNA reported that the head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organisation, Ali Akbar Salehi, had met with United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and made clear Iran’s dissatisfaction with European proposals to save the nuclear deal. Referring to Iran’s regional role, Salehi was quoted as saying, “If it continues like this, all sides will lose.”