Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

US official says successor to Soleimani faces same fate if he kills Americans

“I think the regime now understands that they cannot attack America at will and expect to get away with it,” said U.S. special representative for Iran Brian Hook.

U.S. Special Representative for Iran Brian Hook announces U.S. sanctions against Iranian Brig. Gen. Hassan Shavapour on Jan. 17, 2020, at the U.S. State Department in Washington, D.C. Photo: Jackson Richman/JNS.
U.S. Special Representative for Iran Brian Hook announces U.S. sanctions against Iranian Brig. Gen. Hassan Shavapour on Jan. 17, 2020, at the U.S. State Department in Washington, D.C. Photo: Jackson Richman/JNS.

U.S. special representative for Iran Brian Hook said the successor to slain Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani, Brig. Gen. Esmail Ghaani, who now heads the Quds Force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, would suffer the same fate if he also killed Americans, he told the Asharq al-Awsat newspaper.

After the U.S. assassinated Soleimani in a drone strike on Jan. 3, Iran quickly appointed Ghaani as the new head of the Quds Force and he pledged to continue Soleimani’s course.

“If he follows a similar path of killing Americans, he will meet the same fate because the president has made clear for years that any attacks against American personnel or interests in the region will be met with a decisive response,” Hook said in the interview with the London-based Arab daily published on Thursday.

“And I think the regime now understands that they cannot attack America at will and expect to get away with it. So we will hold the regime and its proxies accountable for any attacks on Americans or on American interests in the region,” he added.

Hook also called on the U.N. Security Council to condemn the September attacks on Saudi oil facilities.

“There is a role for the U.N. Security Council to play, to condemn Iran for violating the sovereignty of Saudi Arabia. That was an unprovoked attack by the regime against Saudi Arabia on Sept. 14, and the council needs to condemn it,” said Hook.

The U.S. envoy said that “Iran is not able to get away with the kind of terrorist attacks that they used to. That doesn’t mean that we’ve eliminated Iran’s ability to conduct asymmetric attacks, but our new policy is making a difference.”

Ali Maarij Al-Bahadly “abuses his position to facilitate the diversion of oil to be sold for the benefit of the Iranian regime and its proxy militias in Iraq,” the department said.
When Americans are threatened overseas, “nine out of 10 times you scratch the surface of that threat, and three nanometers later, you find Iran,” Sebastian Gorka, the White House counterterrorism head, said.
The 30 defendants are “accused of scoring significant profits from expected market moves and making out like bandits,” the FBI said.
“Our foreign agent laws are designed to address situations just like this, and we must ensure accountability in order to protect the interests of students,” stated Kenneth Marcus, of the center.
“Many of these communities are experiencing real antisemitism,” Rabbi Mendy Kotlarsky told JNS following the Mykonos summit focused on security and outreach.
The ruling was issued as part of a legal battle over Gov. Greg Abbott’s designation of the organization as a foreign terrorist entity.