Biden’s election victory revives Iranian hopes for lifting US sanctions
 
 
The Iranian regime has long waited for the departure of US
President Donald Trump, who imposed heavy economic sanctions on Tehran, which
negatively affected it and weakened its terrorist militias in the region.
Now the mullahs are hoping that Democratic President-elect
Joe Biden will decide to lift the economic sanctions and ease the pressure
imposed on Iran, although he recently promised to hold Tehran responsible for
its actions.
The Iranian regime is facing political, economic and social
crises due to the sanctions, which have led to the collapse of its legitimacy.
Therefore, regime figures have resorted to adopting a discourse of restoring
hope at home for a better future based on the personality of who occupies the
White House.
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said
during a press conference I nTehran on Monday, November 9 that his country will
follow the steps taken by the next government in the United States, stressing
that Washington must correct the mistakes of the Trump government, which
withdrew from the nuclear agreement and other agreements signed by the United
States.
Meanwhile, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif
said that Trump, who lost his reelection bid, is gone, while Iran and its
neighboring countries still remain in the region.
“Trump is gone, and we and our neighbors will remain.
Betting on foreigners does not bring security but disappointments,” Zarif
tweeted on Sunday evening, November 8, in a clear threat to the countries of
the region that are suffering from Iranian terrorism.
Zarif added, “We extend our hands to our neighbors to
cooperate in the pursuit of the common interests of our peoples and countries.”
On May 8, 2018, Trump announced his country's withdrawal
from the 2015 nuclear agreement with Iran, which he describes as the largest
international supporter of terrorism, accusing it of seeking to obtain nuclear
weapons.
The Trump administration also launched a maximum pressure
campaign against Iran, under which severe economic sanctions were imposed to
curb Iranian terrorism.
In turn, the Iranian government has repeatedly called on
countries in the region, especially the Gulf, to stop relying on the United
States to ensure the security of the Middle East, stressing its readiness to
sign military and security treaties with the Arab countries, in a clear effort
to extend Tehran’s hegemony over the region.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


