City
Epaper

China's entry into Iran will destabilise Middle East: Pompeo

By ANI | Updated: August 9, 2020 08:25 IST

US Secretary of State Michael Pompeo on Saturday (local time) said that China's entry into Iran will destabilise the Middle East.

Open in App

US Secretary of State Michael Pompeo on Saturday (local time) said that China's entry into Iran will destabilise the Middle East.

"China's entry into Iran will destabilise the Middle East. Iran remains the world's largest state sponsor of terror, and to have access to weapons systems and commerce and money flowing from the Chinese Communist Party only compounds that risk for that region," said Pompeo.

He said that the tide is turning as the like-minded countries are coming together to counter China's aggression.

"The tide is turning. All across the world, the threat from the Chinese Communist Party is becoming clearer and clearer, and nations that are like-minded are beginning to come together to rebalance, to push back against this, to protect our freedom and democracy," Pompeo added.

( With inputs from ANI )

Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyMark Mobius was always bullish on India’s economy with young population, robust consumer growth

TechnologySensex, Nifty open higher as geopolitical tensions ease

BusinessMark Mobius was always bullish on India’s economy with young population, robust consumer growth

BusinessSensex, Nifty open higher as geopolitical tensions ease

NationalMark Mobius was always bullish on India’s economy with young population, robust consumer growth

International Realted Stories

International"US, 'Zionist regime' have no regard for security of region": Iran slams role of regional states, demands halt to support

InternationalWar, debt risks strain global finances: IMF

InternationalTrump's top aide says US blockade "squeezing economic life" out of Iran, reiterates anti-nuclear stance

InternationalUkraine receives drones from UK's biggest ever package, Russia says Europe escalating conflict

InternationalIran rules out compromise on nuclear enrichment rights, slams US 'warmongering' in Hormuz