WASHINGTON: The US is not looking to go to war with Iran, the White House said Wednesday even as it cautioned that President Donald Trump will remain “firm” in his position.
The US stoked fears that it was headed to a war with Iran after that it announced that America will deploy an aircraft carrier strike group and a bomber task force in the Middle East to send a “clear and unmistakable” message to Iran that any attack on American interests or its allies will be met with “unrelenting force”.
Asked if the US was headed to war with Iran, White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said, “I certainly hope not”.
“But the president is going to remain firm on our position and I don’t think anybody is looking for any type of war with anybody,” she said.
US National Security Advisor John Bolton said on Sunday the decision to deploy the USS Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group and a bomber task force to the US Central Command region in the Middle East was in response to a number of “troubling and escalatory indications and warnings” from Iran.
The deployment move had come after Trump last month refused to give waivers to countries like India from buying oil from Iran, in an attempt to reduce Iran’s oil exports to zero
After coming to power, Trump withdrew from the Iranian nuclear deal last year and has imposed stringent sanctions against what he describes as the “authoritarian” Iranian regime.
The US is seeking to ramp up pressure on Iran to counter what the White House perceives to be a potential threat.
Last month, the US designated Iran’s Revolutionary Guard a foreign terrorist organisation, the first time the designation has been applied to a government entity.
The designation categorises Iran’s military alongside groups like ISIS, al Qaeda, Hezbollah and Hamas.
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who controls the elite military force, called the designation a “vicious move” and a “mistake.”
The Trump administration insists that it is not seeking to topple Iran’s Islamist regime, but that it only seeks to push the government to stop supporting proxy militias and terrorist groups and otherwise change its behaviour.
Some of the administration’s critics, however, fear that its actions and rhetoric could provoke the Iranians in a manner that may lead to a military confrontation.
Bolton’s remarks also came as new violence erupts between Israel and the Palestinians in Gaza. The group Islamic Jihad, which has a foothold in Gaza, is seen as an Iranian proxy. PTI