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Iran still closed to U.S. influence after nuclear deal

Another prominent hard-liner and Khamenei representative, Ayatollah Ahmad Alamolhoda, recently said the deal “crossed the red lines.” He said Khamenei said outsiders should never be allowed access to Irans security apparatus, but the deal violated that by allowing inspection of military sites.

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Khamenei himself has not publicly approved or disapproved.

“We plugged this course and is going to definitely prevent this in the near future”.

In their statement, the MPs had called for the resumption of missile tests in reaction to the US officials’ brazen rhetoric of war against Iran.

“We have closed such a path and will decisively shut it. We’ll allow neither economic nor political nor cultural intrusion by the United States”.

TEHRAN – The fate of Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers is still not decided but it will not leave the country vulnerable to US influence, supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on Monday.

Tehran agreed to verifiable limits on its atomic energy programme to create confidence that it will not be put to developing nuclear weapons, in exchange for lifting global sanctions crippling its oil-based economy.

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Iran, however, said it would only discuss its nuclear program and that its missiles are exclusively used as a deterrent against any potential foreign aggression. But Western diplomats from IAEA member nations who are familiar with the probe are doubtful that Iran will diverge from claiming that all its nuclear activities are – and were – peaceful, despite what they say is evidence to the contrary. The accord came after almost two years of negotiations between Iran and world powers including the United States, Britain, France, Russia, China and Germany.

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei attends a meeting with university students in Tehran Iran. Khamenei is opposed to