“Just days ago, Iran’s Supreme Leader (Ali) Khamenei, who will oversee implementation of this agreement, was calling Israel a ‘rabid dog’ and accusing the United States of war crimes.” -- U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla.,in a news release Nov. 23
Forget the Senate’s “nuclear option.” Congress’s latest point of tension is the nuclear deal with Iran.
U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., is among those who oppose the six-month deal in which the United States agreed to lessen sanctions on Iran in exchange for certain limits placed on Iran’s growing nuclear program.
In a news release, Rubio highlighted a notoriously rocky relationship between the two countries. He went on to criticize the country’s leadership.
“Just days ago, Iran’s Supreme Leader (Ali) Khamenei, who will oversee implementation of this agreement, was calling Israel a ‘rabid dog’ and accusing the United States of war crimes,” he said.
Khamenei is Iran’s appointed supreme leader and the country’s head of state. He holds more power in Iran than even President Hassan Rouhani, who is widely considered a moderate. Many analysts credit Rouhani’s election with making the recent agreement possible.
As supreme leader, Khamenei is in charge of all of Iran’s foreign policy, including the nuclear agreement. But it’s worth noting that since he’s so high-ranking, he won’t be heavily involved in day-to-day operations — that’s left to nuclear physicists and other lower-ranking officials.
We wanted to see whether Rubio’s claim was right.
‘Rabid dog’
U.S. and Iranian news outlets reported that Khamenei said something about a “rabid dog” in the speech Nov. 20.
We saw conflicting reports in the direct translation of the phrase from Farsi to English. It wasn’t immediately clear to us whether Khamenei directed the comment toward Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, all Israeli people or all Jewish people.
PolitiFact asked two Farsi-speaking Iranian political science experts for independent translations of the line in question. We showed the experts the Farsi speech transcript published on Khamenei’s official website. We also consulted an English-language video translation from Press TV, a state-owned news outlet in Iran.
We found small discrepancies in the exact translation:
“Israel is the rabid dog of the region” was the wording Syracuse University Iranian studies professor Mehrzad Boroujerdi put forward, which closely matches many news reports.
“These Zionist financiers are really like wild beasts” was the wording Middle East Institute scholar Alex Vatanka gave us. He told us “wild beasts” and “rabid dogs” were not so far off from each other in Farsi. “Zionist financiers,” he said, is a clear reference to the Israeli government, especially Netanyahu.
“Israeli officials cannot be called humans. They are like animals, some of them.” That’s from the Press TV translator.
Exact wording aside, the sentiment is largely the same. Khamenei did in fact call either government officials or the country as a whole the animals of the Middle East.
That’s consistent with Khamenei’s overall stance, Vatanka said. But Khamenei’s comments don’t necessarily reflect the way other Iranian officials or the public feels about Israel, Vatanka added.
‘War crimes’
Rubio also said that Khamenei recently accused the United States of carrying out war crimes. When we watched the speech, we found truth to that.
“They committed crimes in Iraq, in Pakistan with drones. Still they are committing crimes with drones,” he said, according to the Press TV translation. “In Afghanistan they bombard people and they continue to commit crimes. Anywhere in which they can serve their interests, they will commit crimes including torture, killings, the Guantanamo prison.”
That’s not an unusual statement for Khamenei.
“The man’s position on the United States has always been that the United States is unjust in its policies, it’s arrogant in its policies and it’s not trustworthy,” Vatanka said. But at the same time, Khamenei has always supported reaching out to the United States when he feels the timing is right, Vatanka added.
“(Iranian officials) would not have been sitting in Geneva negotiating with Kerry if they didn’t have the green light from Khamenei,” he said.
Our ruling
Rubio said, “Just days ago, Iran’s Supreme Leader (Ali) Khamenei, who will oversee implementation of this agreement, was calling Israel a ‘rabid dog’ and accusing the United States of war crimes.” Based on expert translations, we confirmed that Khamenei referred to either Israel or the Israeli government as the animals of the Middle East. In the same speech, he criticized the United States, saying they “continue to commit crimes” in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq and Guantanamo Bay.
We rate Rubio’s statement True.
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