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Saudi Crown Prince Likens Iran’s Supreme Leader to

Hitler
nytimes.com/2018/03/15/world/middleeast/mohammed-bin-salman-iran-hitler.html

By Ben Hubbard March 15,


2018

BEIRUT, Lebanon — Saudi Arabia’s powerful crown prince has compared the supreme
leader of Iran to Adolf Hitler, and said that his country would acquire a nuclear bomb “as
soon as possible” if Iran developed nuclear weapons.

The comments by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman ratcheted up the rhetoric in the
increasingly volatile rivalry between Saudi Arabia and Iran, which has fueled sectarianism
and war across the Middle East. His statements were in an excerpt, released on
Thursday, of a prerecorded interview with “60 Minutes,” the CBS News program.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry responded by calling the prince a delusional and devious novice
who “has no idea of politics.”

Saudi Arabia, a Sunni monarchy, blames Iran for funding militias to undermine Arab
states, while Shiite Iran accuses Saudi Arabia of backing Sunni extremist groups. Their
struggle for regional dominance has put the two nations on opposite sides of conflicts in
Yemen, Syria and Iraq that have killed hundreds of thousands of people and displaced
millions.

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Prince Mohammed, who jailed hundreds of the kingdom’s most potent figures while
swiftly consolidating his own power, is scheduled to arrive in the United States on
Monday for an extended trip. His plans include meeting with President Trump in the
White House and with business, entertainment and technology leaders in a number of
American cities.

One of his primary goals is to persuade Americans to invest in his reform plans, which
aim to diversify the Saudi economy away from oil, increase the kingdom’s military self-
sufficiency and raise its citizens’ quality of life.

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His comments on Iran also suggested that he would seek further cooperation with the
United States in combating Iranian influence in the Middle East, a goal he shares with the
Trump administration.

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In the interview, Prince Mohammed, 32, played down Iran’s power, saying its army was
not well ranked in the Muslim world and that Saudi Arabia had a larger economy.

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Image

The Saudi prince said that Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader, “wants to create his own
project in the Middle East very much like Hitler, who wanted to expand at the time.”Credit...Office of
the Iranian Supreme Leader, via Associated Press

“Iran is far from being equal to Saudi Arabia,” he said, speaking through a translator.

When asked about his previous comments comparing Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the
supreme leader of Iran, to Hitler, he replied, “Absolutely.”

“He wants to create his own project in the Middle East very much like Hitler, who wanted
to expand at the time,” Prince Mohammed said. “Many countries around the world and
in Europe did not realize how dangerous Hitler was until what happened, happened. I
don’t want to see the same events happening in the Middle East.”

He was then asked whether Saudi Arabia sought nuclear weapons to counter Iran.

“Saudi Arabia does not want to acquire any nuclear bomb, but without a doubt if Iran
developed a nuclear bomb, we will follow suit as soon as possible,” he said.

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Reacting to the prince’s remarks, the Iran Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Qassemi
was quoted by state media as saying they “do not deserve a response because he is a
delusional naïve person who never talks but with lies and bitterness and has no idea of
politics, but to use untimely strong words due to lack of foresight.”

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Saudi officials grew furious with the Obama administration for its push with other world
powers to reach an agreement placing limits on Iran’s nuclear capabilities.

Like Israeli leaders and many Republicans in the United States, they claimed that the
agreement would merely delay Iran’s quest for nuclear weapons, while ignoring Iran’s
other activities, like supporting Shiite militias.

Iran has insisted that its nuclear program was peaceful and intended to produce only
energy and research, not weapons.

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Saudi Arabia has not been known to seek nuclear weapons, but its cabinet this week
approved a policy for a new atomic energy program.

The new policy stated that “all nuclear activities will be restricted to peaceful purposes,
within the framework defined by international legislations, treaties and conventions,”
according to a statement released by the government on Wednesday. It remained
unclear when work on the new program would begin.

The “60 Minutes” interview with Prince Mohammed will be broadcast on Sunday.

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