Iran's IRGC threatens war 'beyond the region' if US resumes attacks

Iran's IRGC threatens war 'beyond the region' if US resumes attacks Iran's IRGC threatens war 'beyond the region' if US resumes attacks

DUBAI — Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has threatened to extend a renewed war beyond the Middle East if the United States resumes attacks against Tehran.The warning came after US President Donald Trump threatened to strike Iran again if it did not accept a deal to end the conflict.Trump said on Monday, and again on Tuesday, that he had come close to ordering a new bombing campaign but had put it off at the last minute to give more time for diplomacy.”I was an hour away from making the decision to go today,” Trump told reporters at the White House.In a strongly worded statement, the IRGC addressed the “American-Zionist enemy,” saying Washington and Israel have failed to learn from repeated strategic defeats and are once again resorting to threats.In a statement carried by the semi-official Tasnim news agency in Iran, the IRGC said: “Should aggression against Iran be repeated, the regional war that was promised will this time extend beyond the region, and our crushing blows in places you can scarcely imagine will reduce you to ruins.”Six weeks since Trump paused Operation Epic Fury for a ceasefire, talks to end the war have largely stalled.Iran submitted a new offer to the US this ‌week, but its public accounts of it repeat terms previously rejected by Trump, including demands for control of the Strait of Hormuz, compensation for war damage, lifting of sanctions, release of frozen assets and the withdrawal of U.S. troops from the area.The IRGC said that while the US and Israel attacked Iran with the full capabilities of the world’s most expensive military forces, Iran did not deploy all of its capacities against them.Iran has largely shut the Strait of Hormuz to all ships apart from its own since the US-Israeli campaign began in February, causing the biggest disruption to global energy supplies in history. The United States responded last month with its own blockade of Iran’s ports.Two giant Chinese tankers laden with around 4 million barrels of oil exited the strait on Wednesday, the latest signal that Iran is willing to ease its blockade for countries it considers friendly. Iran had announced last week, while Trump was in Beijing for a summit, that it had reached an agreement to ease rules for Chinese ships.South Korea’s foreign minister said on Wednesday a Korean tanker was crossing the strait in cooperation with Iran.Shipping monitor Lloyd’s List said at least 54 ships had transited the strait last week, around double the number from the week before. But that is still only a tiny fraction of the 140 or so each day that typically crossed before the war.Trump is under pressure to end the war, with soaring energy prices hurting his Republican Party ahead of congressional elections in November. Since the ceasefire in late April, his public comments have veered from threats ‌to restart ⁠bombing to declarations that a peace deal was at hand, often in the same breath.On Tuesday he said the war would be over “very quickly”. Vice President JD Vance, who led US delegation last month at the only round of peace talks so far, also talked up progress: “We’re in a pretty good spot here,” Vance told a White House press briefing.The fluctuating US stances have sent oil prices bouncing up and down from day to day, though they have risen week by week since early May. Benchmark one-month Brent crude futures eased about 1.5% on Wednesday morning, just below $110 a barrel but still well above last week.”Investors are keen to gauge whether Washington and Tehran can actually find common ground and reach ⁠a peace agreement, with the U.S. stance shifting daily,” said Toshitaka Tazawa, an analyst at Fujitomi Securities.The US-Israeli bombing killed thousands of people in Iran before it was suspended in a ceasefire in early April. Israel has also killed thousands more and driven hundreds of thousands from their homes in Lebanon, which it invaded in pursuit of the Iran-backed Hezbollah militia.The Iran ceasefire has mostly held, though ⁠there was a spike in attacks on shipping and on Gulf states in early May when Trump announced a naval mission to reopen the strait. Trump called off that mission, Project Freedom, after just 48 hours.Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said when they launched ⁠the war that their aims were to curb Iran’s support for regional militias, dismantle its nuclear program, destroy its missile capabilities and make it easier for Iranians to topple their rulers.But the war has yet to deprive Iran of its stockpile of near-weapons-grade enriched uranium or its ability to threaten neighbours with missiles, drones and proxy militias.The Islamic Republic’s clerical leadership, which had faced a mass uprising at the start of the year, withstood the superpower onslaught with no sign of organized opposition.

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