Iran ‘told US it’s not trying to kill Trump’

Elon Musk reportedly met with Iranian envoy in New York on separate matter

Protesters burn pictures of Joe Biden and Donald Trump during a demonstration against the killing of Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, Iran's top nuclear scientist, in Tehran on Nov 28, 2020. (Photo: Majid Asgaripour/West Asia News Agency via Reuters)
Protesters burn pictures of Joe Biden and Donald Trump during a demonstration against the killing of Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, Iran’s top nuclear scientist, in Tehran on Nov 28, 2020. (Photo: Majid Asgaripour/West Asia News Agency via Reuters)

Iran sent a message to the Biden administration in October saying that it was not trying to kill Donald Trump, as Tehran attempted to ease rising tensions with Washington, according to US officials, as well as an Iranian official and an analyst.

The message, sent to Washington through an intermediary, came after a note from the Biden administration in September that warned that the United States would consider any Iranian attempt on the life of Trump, then the Republican candidate for president, to be “an act of war”.

Since Trump won the Nov 5 election, many Iranian former officials, pundits and media outlets have been have been publicly advocating for Tehran to try to engage with the president-elect and pursue a more conciliatory approach, despite vows from Trump’s allies to renew a high-pressure campaign against Iran.

US officials have said that Iran sought to kill Trump in revenge for ordering the 2020 drone strike that killed Gen Qassem Soleimani, the commander who directed Iran’s militias and proxy forces. The Department of Justice has issued two indictments that officials said were related to Iranian plotting against Trump.

US officials have also accused Iran of plotting to assassinate other Trump administration figures.

The officials interviewed for this story spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive diplomatic messages.

The message exchange was first reported by The Wall Street Journal.

The message from Iran repeated Tehran’s contention that the killing of Soleimani was a criminal act, the two US officials said. But it also said that Iran did not want to kill Trump, according to the US officials, an Iranian official and an Iranian analyst who talks with both sides.

The Iranians said the message to the United States indicated that Iran sought to avenge the killing of Soleimani through international legal means.

The US officials said the Iranian message was not a letter from a specific official. But the Iranian official and analyst said it was from Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Iran’s mission to the United Nations declined to comment on the message exchange. But it said in a statement that Iran was committed to responding to Soleimani’s killing “through legal and judicial avenues”.

During the presidential campaign, US officials warned that Iran was plotting to kill Trump.

Federal prosecutors in New York said last week that Iranian plotters had discussed a plan to assassinate him, which Iran’s Foreign Ministry called baseless.

In July, Asif Raza Merchant, a Pakistani man who had visited Iran, was arrested in New York and was later charged with trying to hire a hit man to assassinate American politicians. Investigators believe his potential targets included Trump.

Intelligence about Iran’s intentions was provided to the Secret Service, which added counter-sniper teams to Trump’s protective detail ahead of the attempted assassination attempt on him in July, in Butler, Pennsylvania, by a lone gunman with no ties to Tehran, according to US officials.

Iran had considered Trump to be a difficult target because of his Secret Service protection. But after the attempted assassination in Pennsylvania and another near Trump’s golf course in Florida, US intelligence agencies assessed that Iran grew more confident that the former president could be successfully targeted.

That assessment of a growing threat, combined with the attempts on Trump’s life, prompted both an intense security review and a diplomatic campaign to convince Iran that it was making a grave miscalculation, according to officials.

Musk meets Iranian envoy

Elon Musk, who has become a close ally of Trump, met with Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations on Monday, at Musk’s request, the Iranians said — a sign that it is not only the lame duck Democratic administration that is looking to avoid a direct clash, but also the Trump camp.

The Iranians told the Times that the meeting with Ambassador Amir Saied Iravani, at a secret location in New York, was about defusing tensions between Iran and the United States under the Trump administration.

Musk did not respond to a request for comment.

Iran on Saturday denied that the meeting took place.

A Foreign Ministry spokesperson “while categorically denying claims made in some American media about a meeting between Elon Musk and Iran’s permanent representative to the United Nations in New York, expressed surprise at its wide coverage by the American media”, the official news agency IRNA said.

The United States and Iran have not had official diplomatic relations since Iran’s 1979 revolution, when 52 Americans were taken hostage in the US Embassy in Tehran, and held for more than a year.

The Swiss Embassy in Tehran is the official diplomatic liaison between the two nations, but US and Iranian officials have held direct and indirect negotiations in recent years on a host of issues, including Iran’s nuclear programme, regional tensions and swapping detainees.

The US and Iranian messages were sent through the Swiss, according to the Iranian official and the analyst.

Source – Bangkok News