US Vice President Mike Pence in an interview airing Sunday warned
Iran “not to test the resolve” of the
Donald Trump administration, days
after Washington slapped new sanctions on Tehran following a ballistic
missile test launch.
Relations between the two sides have deteriorated sharply since Trump
took office last month promising a tough line on what he sees as
Iranian belligerence toward US interests.
“Iran would do well to look at the calendar and realize there’s a new
president in the Oval Office. And Iran would do well not to test the
resolve of this new president,” Pence told ABC News in an interview
taped Saturday.
The tough talk came after Trump’s Pentagon chief James Mattis
declared last week that Iran was “the single biggest state sponsor of
terrorism in the world.”
The charged rhetoric has raised questions over whether the United
States will abandon commitments it made under a landmark deal —
negotiated with several world powers and approved by president Barack
Obama in 2015 — that obliged Iran to curtail its nuclear program in
exchange for relief from the US and international sanctions.
“The Iranians got a deal from the international community that again,
the president and I and our administration think was a terrible deal,”
Pence said.
Although Mattis and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson have said the
United States would stand by the agreement, Pence was less forthcoming.
“Well, we’re evaluating that as we speak,” he said.
“I think the president will make that decision in the days ahead. And
he’ll listen to all of his advisors, but make no mistake about it. The
resolve of this president is such that Iran would do well to think twice
about their continued hostile and belligerent actions.”
US officials said the new sanctions imposed Friday were in response
to Iran’s recent ballistic missile test and its support for the Huthi
rebels in Yemen, who recently targeted a Saudi warship.
The White House has said “nothing is off the table” — even military action

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