Iran said on Sunday a "disastrous situation" facing
the United States in Iraq and Afghanistan coupled with Washington's
domestic issues made any U.S. attack on the Islamic Republic
unlikely.
The Foreign Ministry comments came two days after the U.S.
Navy said a cargo ship hired by the U.S. military fired warning
shots at approaching boats in the Gulf, underscoring tension
in an area vital to world oil shipments, and driving up crude
prices.
"We think it would be unlikely the Americans would take
the decision to get themselves into a new fiasco, the consequences
of which they themselves have acknowledged would be painful
for the region and the world," spokesman Mohammad Ali
Hosseini said.
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"We hope those who think better in America view the
realities more closely and manage to correct such approaches,"
he told a news conference.
Relations between Washington and Tehran, which have not had
diplomatic ties for nearly three decades, are tense over Iran's
nuclear programme and over who is to blame for violence in
Iraq.
Hostile rhetoric between the two foes and close encounters
in the Gulf have fuelled some speculation the United States
may be planning some sort of military action against Tehran.
However, a U.S. intelligence report in December that said
Iran halted a nuclear weapons programme in 2003 made any U.S.
attack very unlikely, analysts say. Iran denies ever having
ambitions to build nuclear weapons.
Last week, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said another
Middle East war would be "disastrous on a number of levels."
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