January 6 US-Iran news | CNN

The latest on the US-Iran crisis

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Iranian foreign minister: Trump prepared to commit war crimes
01:35 - Source: CNN

What you need to know

  • Iranian general’s burial: Huge crowds gathered in Kerman, the hometown of Iranian general Qasem Soleimani, ahead of his burial. A number of people were killed in a stampede, state TV reported. 
  • Zarif accuses US of terrorism: Iran’s Foreign Minister called President Trump’s order to kill Soleimani an act of “state terrorism” in an interview with CNN
  • Confusion over US troop status: The US military sent a letter to Iraq’s government suggesting a troop withdrawal, but a top general later said the letter was released by mistake and was poorly worded. 
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Our live coverage of the airstrike and the aftermath has moved here.

UK Foreign Secretary to meet with German and Italian counterparts over US-Iran tensions

UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab arrives to meet with Prime Minister Boris Johnson on January 6 in London, England. Credit: Peter Summers/Getty Images

British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab will meet with his French and German counterparts in Brussels Tuesday to discuss tensions between the US and Iran, according to a statement from the UK Foreign Office.

All three will “push for deescalation,” said the statement. The trio will also discuss the Iran nuclear deal following Tehran’s announcement on Sunday that it is withdrawing from further commitments to the agreement.

People killed in stampede at Soleimani's funeral, says state media

“A number of people” have died in a stampede at General Qasem Soleimani’s funeral Tuesday in his hometown of Kerman, Iran’s Press TV reported, citing the head of Iran’s emergency organization. 

Press TV is reporting “millions” of people have taken to the streets of Kerman to pay their respects to Soleimani. CNN has not been able to verify this figure.

European officials say all options are possible for Iranian retaliation 

The Middle East should brace for all types of retaliation following General Qasem Soleimani’s death, due to his “cult status” both inside and outside of Iran, European officials told CNN.

Officials are preparing for the possibility of Iran accelerating the funding and equipping of regional proxies with conventional weapons to target the US and possibly its allies across the region. They note that this decentralized approach would make it more difficult to defend personnel and buildings.

Other concerns include a concerted set of disruptive or degrading cyber-attacks, similar to those we’ve seen in the past.

Officials told CNN the size and capability of the US military – along with President Trump’s demonstration that he will act aggressively – make it unlikely that a full-scale military confrontation will occur. However, forecasting is difficult as it is hard to predict what triggers Trump’s actions.

Iran could respond in both covert and open ways in order to show their power to US and international audiences, they added.

If Iran does respond with a high-profile attack, it is important to remember that the US and Iran are entering their 41st year of conflict. But officials also say that the death of Soleimani is the first time the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) have paid a major price for their campaigns in Iraq and throughout the region. 

Any high profile short-term response could take weeks rather than days due to heightened protective measures now in place, the officials say.

Iranian Parliament designates US forces "terrorists"

Iranian lawmakers have unanimously voted for a motion declaring all US forces as “terrorists” in response to the assassination of Iranian General Qassem Soleimani last Friday, according to Iran’s state-news agency IRNA.

The vote took place during the country’s parliamentary session Tuesday, IRNA reported. After the plan was approved, delegates chanted, “Death to America.”

In the same session, the parliament approved an expanded budget for the Quds Force, which Soleimani headed before his death.

Iran's Zarif: Trump is "making it worse for America" in the Middle East

Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif

Speaking to CNN in Tehran, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said Tuesday that the country is not scared of further US military action following the airstrike which killed top general Qasem Soleimani in Iraq.

Zarif refused to be drawn into how Tehran might retaliate for Soleimani’s killing, though experts have pointed to numerous US vulnerabilities across the region in countries where Iran has proxies and allies.

“We have people on our side in this region,” Zarif said. “Beautiful military equipment doesn’t rule the world, people rule the world. President Trump has to wake up to the reality that the people of this region are enraged, the people of this region want the United States out.”

Iranians have taken to the streets in their hundreds of thousands in recent days to mourn Soleimani, most recently in the general’s hometown of Kerman today.

“We are here, and we will not move,” Zarif said. “We have been here for millennia, the United States is a newcomer.”

Referencing Trump’s threats of further strikes against Iran should Tehran respond to Soleimani’s killing, Zarif said that Trump “has to apologize, he has to change course.”

"The United States destroyed stability in this region," Iranian foreign minister tells CNN

Iran’s Foreign Minister Javad Zarif blamed Washington’s hardline policies against Tehran for destabilizing the Middle East and setting back peace in the region.

“What is important is for the Trump regime to realize is that everything in this region was improving following the JCPOA,” Zarif told CNN’s Fred Pleitgen in Tehran, referring to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the nuclear deal agreed under former US President Barack Obama.

“We saw normal elections in Iraq, normal elections in Lebanon … we had the reduction of tensions in Syria … what happened?” he said. “The United States started a maximum pressure campaign, terrorizing the Iranian people, making it difficult for Iranians to even get food and medicine.”

Zarif said that “a war was started a long time ago by the United States, the United States destroyed stability in this region, the United States undermined security in this region.”

Pointing to the effects of crippling sanctions placed on Tehran by Washington, Zarif said that “at least in the last month 25 Iranian babies died because of (tuberculosis) and because of US sanctions.”

Iran's top diplomat promises "proportional" response to US "state terrorism"

By threatening to target Iranian cultural sites if Tehran responds to the airstrike which killed general Qasem Soleimani, US President Donald Trump showed the international community that “he has no respect for international law and is prepared to commit war crimes – attacking cultural sites is a war crime,” Iran’s top diplomat said Tuesday.

Speaking to CNN’s Fred Pleitgen in Tehran, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said that Trump’s actions and statements showed “he doesn’t care about international law.”

The strike against Soleimani while he was in Iraq was an act of “state terrorism,” Zarif added, reiterating that Tehran will mount a response.

“This is an act of aggression against Iran, and amounts to an armed attack against Iran and we will respond. But we will respond proportionally not disproportionally,” he said. “We will respond lawfully, we are not lawless people like President Trump.”

Iranian foreign minister: Trump must realize his threats "will not frighten us"

Speaking to CNN’s Fred Pleitgen in Tehran, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said that US President Donald Trump should take a message from the huge crowds who have turned out across Iran to mourn slain general Qasem Soleimani.

“President Trump, after watching the crowds yesterday, must stop threatening these people who will be further enraged by his threats – his threats will not frighten us,” Zarif said.

He was speaking shortly after Soleimani’s funeral was held in the general’s hometown of Kerman, southeast of the capital Tehran.

Zarif added that Americans should also be asking questions about the airstrike that killed Soleimani, and the potential ramifications.

“Has (Trump) made Americans more secure? Do Americans feel more secure, or more welcome in this region?” Zarif said.

“How do (Americans) feel about people chanting … that they should leave? How do they fell about that?”

Germany is temporarily withdrawing some troops from Iraq

The German military has withdrawn some of its troops from Iraq, a spokesman for the country’s Ministry of Defense told CNN. About 35 soldiers in the cities of Baghdad and Taji have been temporarily moved to Kuwait and Jordan, the spokesman said.

Some German troops remain deployed in the Iraqi city of Erbil in a training capacity, the spokesman added.

Huge crowds turn out for Soleimani's funeral

Iranian mourners gather for the burial of slain top general Qasem Soleimani in his hometown Kerman on January 7, 2020.

Huge crowds have taken to the streets in Kerman, the hometown of slain Iranian general Qasem Soleimani, whose funeral is being held today.

Similar crowds swarmed multiple Iranian cities over the weekend to condemn Soleimani’s killing by the US in an airstrike near Baghdad airport in Iraq on Friday.

Iranian state television said millions of people attended Soleimani’s funeral in Tehran on Monday, although this figure has yet to be verified.

A lesson for Kim Jong Un in the death of Qasem Soleimani 

In the dog days of 2017, when it appeared North Korea and the United States were on the path to war, a debate raged in the halls of the White House

If the US military conducted a limited series of strikes on North Korea, would it scare Kim Jong Un enough to stop the young leader’s dogged pursuit for nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles?

North Korea’s answer, at least in state media, was a resounding no. Pyongyang warned it would respond to any military action against its sovereign territory with force of its own.

But behind North Korea’s colorful threats was always an important message: Pyongyang is developing nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles capable of reaching the US, so decision makers in Washington will think twice about whether to conduct a so-called “bloody nose” strike or, say, kill a general whom is deemed a terrorist and an imminent threat.

This is likely the lens through which North Korea views the Trump administration’s decision to kill Iranian commander Qasem Soleimani in a drone strike on Friday, a strike that has thrown the Middle East into crisis and inflamed tensions between Tehran and Washington even further. Washington didn’t have to fear nuclear retaliation with Iran. But it does with North Korea.

Read more here

China doesn't want war, but Trump's strike against Iran could present an opportunity to Beijing

In the wake of the US strike that killed Qasem Soleimani in Baghdad last week, Iran’s leaders will likely be looking to its alliances with Russia and China to counterbalance American aggression, even as Tehran considers possible retaliation for the death of one of its most popular military figures.

China in particular could play a key role in containing the fallout and preventing another Middle Eastern conflict. In a call with his Iranian counterpart Saturday, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi condemned the “military adventurist act by the US” which “goes against basic norms governing international relations and will aggravate tensions and turbulence in the region.”

A statement added that Tehran hoped China could “play an important role in preventing escalation of regional tensions.”

Such sentiments are also likely shared well beyond Iran’s borders, including among other Middle Eastern powers which are no fans of Tehran. The killing of Soleimani could present Beijing with a major opportunity, not only to prevent another disastrous war, but to increase its influence in the region, supplanting an increasingly unpredictable Washington.

Read more here

Soleimani’s funeral is starting in his hometown

The funeral for Qasem Soleimani is starting in his hometown of Kerman, southeast of the Iranian capital Tehran.

His body will be carried from Azadi Square in Kerman to his final resting place.

Canada's Trudeau says country is in alignment with European allies on Iran crisis

Speaking with the President of the European Council, Charles Michel, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau “emphasized the need for de-escalation and dialogue, and called on all parties to exercise restraint” in Iraq, following the killing of Iranian general Qasem Soleimani near Baghdad last week.

Canada currently leads NATO’s training mission in Iraq and it affirmed its commitment to remain there. Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said in a statement released to CNN Monday that Canada remains committed to a stable and united Iraq. 

“Canada is deeply engaged in development, humanitarian, military and diplomatic efforts to support Iraq,” the statement said. “Minister Champagne pledged to continue to work with the government of Iraq to achieve the peace, stability and prosperity that the people of Iraq want and deserve.”

Trudeau and Michel reiterated their support for the preservation of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), the Iranian nuclear deal, which they said played a crucial role in regional and global security.

Soleimani’s funeral to begin at 11 p.m. ET

The funeral for Qasem Soleimani is set to begin on Tuesday morning at 7:30 a.m. local time (11 p.m. ET Monday) in his hometown of Kerman, according to Iran’s semi-official news agency ISNA. 

Iranian state-funded Press TV broadcast live pictures of the arrival of Soleimani’s body to his hometown. According to ISNA, Soleimani’s body arrived in Kerman around 3:00am local (6:30pET Monday).

An army parade was held to welcome his body, which was then carried by mourners to the place where the funeral will be held Tuesday.

Sen. Lindsey Graham: Targeting Iranian cultural sites "undercuts what we're trying to do"

Sen. Lindsey Graham, a Republican from South Carolina, said he has concerns with President Trump saying Iranian sites should be targeted.

Graham, a close ally of the President, said he expressed his concerns to Trump today.

Graham added: “The bottom line is I think the President saying, ‘We will hit you hard’ is the right message. Cultural sites is not hitting them hard — it’s creating more problems. We’re trying to show solidarity with the Iranian people. Their culture is not my problem.”

Increased force protection ordered for Canadian troops in Iraq, defense minister says

Canada’s Defense Minister Harjit Sajjan told CBC News that increased force protection has been ordered for Canadian troops in Iraq and non-essential personnel have been relocated out of the country.  

On the Iraqi Parliament vote to end the presence of foreign troops, Sajjan told the CBC, “We know the current situation is far more complicated, and we have to respect their process, but it is more complicated than just one vote. So we will go through the number of days, and potentially weeks to see where the situation lands.”

Sajjan said he spoke with US Secretary of Defense Mark Esper on Friday and received no indication that American troops would withdraw from Iraq. 

Soleimani's body arrives in his hometown ahead of burial

The body of Iran’s Gen. Qasem Soleimani has arrived in his hometown of Kerman ahead of his burial there later Tuesday, Iranian state-funded Press TV reported.

Soleimani was killed by a US airstrike ordered by President Trump at Baghdad International Airport on Friday.

Tehran’s streets were packed with black-clad mourners on Monday as a sea of people turned out to pay their respects to Soleimani.

Pentagon leadership defends intelligence on Soleimani strike

The Pentagon’s top leadership on Monday defended the intelligence that drove the US military to carry out the strike that killed Iran’s Gen. Qasem Soleimani.

They denied reports that the intelligence was “thin” and stressed that very few people in government have seen it.

“And I will be happy when the appropriate time comes and in front of the proper committees and anybody else, through history and every — I will stand by the intelligence I saw, that it was compelling, it was imminent, and it was very, very clear in scale, scope. Did it exactly say who, what, when, where? No, but he was planning, coordinating and synchronizing significant combat operations against US military forces in the region and it was imminent,” Milley said.

“We’re not going to go further than that because of the sources and methods and I know people say well you’re hiding behind it and you lie and all that. That’s not true, I know what I saw and I think I said publicly previously and I will reiterate it, that we, those of us who are involved in the decision making of that, we would have been culpably negligent to the American people had we not made the decision we made,” he added.

READ MORE

How Republican hawks primed Trump to strike back at Iran
Iraqi Parliament votes for government to work on plan to end US troop presence in Iraq after Soleimani killing
One way Iran could retaliate on the United States: Cyber attacks
Iran conflict confirms Trump is who Dems think he is

READ MORE

How Republican hawks primed Trump to strike back at Iran
Iraqi Parliament votes for government to work on plan to end US troop presence in Iraq after Soleimani killing
One way Iran could retaliate on the United States: Cyber attacks
Iran conflict confirms Trump is who Dems think he is