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		Iran's Rouhani accuses West of exploiting 
		Sunni-Shi'ite rift, raps Israel 
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		 [July 01, 2016] 
		By Parisa Hafezi 
 ANKARA (Reuters) - Iran's President Hassan 
		Rouhani accused Western powers of trying to exploit differences between 
		the world's Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims to divert attention from the 
		Israel-Palestinian conflict, state television reported on Friday.
 Rouhani's comments came as tens of thousands of Iranians joined 
			anti-Israel rallies across the country to express support for the 
			Palestinians. They chanted "Death to Israel" and "Death to America" 
			and burned the Israeli flag.
 "The global arrogance (the United States and its allies) wants to 
			create discord among Muslims ... Unity is the only way to restore 
			stability in the region," Rouhani said.
 
 "We stand with the dispossessed Palestinian nation."
 
 Opposition to Israel, which Tehran refuses to recognize, has been a 
			cornerstone of Iranian policy since its 1979 Islamic revolution. 
			Shi'ite Muslim Iran backs Palestinian and Lebanese militant groups 
			who oppose peace with Israel.
 
 "The Zionist regime (Israel) is a regional base for America and the 
			global arrogance ... Disunity and discord among Muslim and terrorist 
			groups in the region ... have diverted us from the important issue 
			of Palestine," Rouhani said.
 
		
		 Shi'ite-led Iran has repeatedly called on its Sunni Muslim rival 
			Saudi Arabia to help improve their strained bilateral relations and 
			work for stability in the Middle East.
 Arch-rivals for regional hegemony, the two oil producers are on 
			opposite sides in proxy battles in the region, where they back 
			competing factions in Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Lebanon and Bahrain.
 
 Ties have worsened since Riyadh's execution in January of prominent 
			Shi'ite cleric Nimr al-Nimr prompted attacks on the Saudi embassy in 
			Tehran. Saudi Arabia subsequently cut all ties with Iran.
 
 Riyadh is worried that a landmark nuclear deal reached between Iran, 
			the United States and five other major powers in 2015 will help 
			Tehran gain the upper hand in their regional standoff.
 
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			Iranian President Hassan Rouhani poses before delivering a speech 
			marking Nowruz, the Iranian new year, in Tehran in this handout 
			photo released by Iranian presidency website on March 20, 2106. 
			REUTERS/President.ir/Handout 
            
			 
			MISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEM
 Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) said in March that 
			"the occupied Palestinian territories are within the range of most 
			of the Islamic Republic’s missiles", Iran's state television Press 
			TV reported.
 
 A senior IRGC commander said Iran's new Russian-made S-300 missile 
			defense system would be operational by March.
 
 "Its divisions are being delivered to Iran and the system will be 
			operational by the end of this Iranian year," the semi-official 
			Tasnim quoted Amir Farzad Esmaili as saying.
 
 Russia delivered the first part of the S-300 missile defense system 
			to Iran in April, one of the most advanced systems of its kind that 
			can engage multiple aircraft and ballistic missiles around 150 km 
			(90 miles) away.
 
 "Hezbollah has 100,000 missiles that are ready to hit Israel to 
			liberate the occupied Palestinian territories if the Zionist regime 
			repeats its past mistakes," Tasnim quoted IRGC deputy head Hossein 
			Salami as saying.
 
 (Editing by Gareth Jones)
 
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