US Navy base in Bahrain would be razed to ground: Iranian MP

A senior Iranian MP warned that if Iran were attacked, it would retaliate against the US Navy base in Bahrain as well as Israel.
Gas flare on an oil production platform in the Soroush oil fields is seen alongside an Iranian flag in the Gulf. (Photo | Reuters)
Gas flare on an oil production platform in the Soroush oil fields is seen alongside an Iranian flag in the Gulf. (Photo | Reuters)

TEHRAN: If Iran were attacked, it would retaliate against the US Navy base in Bahrain as well as Israel, a senior Iranian MP warned. It comes amid an escalation of tensions between Washington and Tehran over new anti-Iranian sanctions imposed by the Trump administration.

"The US Navy's Fifth Fleet has occupied a part of Bahrain, and the enemy's farthest military base is in the Indian Ocean, but these points are all within the range of Iran's missile systems and they will be razed to the ground if the enemy makes a mistake," Mojtaba Zonour, a member of the National Security and Foreign Policy Commission of Iranian Parliament, was quoted as saying by the semi-state news agency FARS.

Zonour, a former senior figure in the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps, added that Iranian missiles would also attack Israel in case of an open war.

"Only seven minutes is needed for the Iranian missile to hit Tel Aviv," he said.

The belligerent rhetoric comes after a heated exchange of hostile gestures by Washington and Tehran last week.

On Friday, the Trump administration slapped sanctions on 25 individuals and entities allegedly involved in Iranian ballistic missile development.

The Iranian government responded with defiance, with Foreign Minister Javad Zarif stating that his country was "unmoved by threats" from Washington. 

The Iranian military conducted as planned a military exercise in the Semnan province on Saturday, testing its new radar and missile capabilities.

On Sunday, Trump upped the ante, calling Iran the "number one terrorist state" in an interview with Fox News. The designation followed a similar comment by his Pentagon chief James Mattis. The US President also reiterated his criticism of a nuclear deal with Iran, but would not go as far as pledging to scrap it.

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