Shropshire Star

UK condemns ‘brutal’ Iranian regime as Donald Trump sends armada to region

Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy criticised Iran’s regime but declined to commit to banning the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

By contributor David Hughes and Rhiannon James, Press Association
Published
Supporting image for story: UK condemns ‘brutal’ Iranian regime as Donald Trump sends armada to region
Protests have taken place around the world in support of the people of Iran who have faced a brutal crackdown by the Tehran regime (Andreea Alexandru/AP)

The UK has condemned Iran’s brutal repression of protests as Donald Trump said he had sent a naval force to the region which could act with “speed and violence” if necessary.

The US president, who has previously pledged help to the uprising against the Tehran regime, suggested the presence of the fleet was linked to Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

In Westminster, Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy criticised Iran’s regime but declined to commit to banning the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

David Lammy standing while speaking in the Commons
Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy condemned the Iranian regime’s ‘brutal repression of peaceful protesters’ (House of Commons/UK Parliament/PA)

Thousands of people have been killed in recent weeks as the Iranian authorities have responded to protests in cities across the country.

In a message on his Truth Social platform, Mr Trump said “a massive armada” led by the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln was heading to Iran, claiming the fleet was bigger than that assembled for the operation in Venezuela which led to the capture of Nicolas Maduro.

“Like with Venezuela it is ready, willing and able to rapidly fulfil its mission, with speed and violence, if necessary,” Mr Trump warned.

The US carried out air strikes against Iranian nuclear sites in June last year.

A US fighter jet is prepared on the deck of an aircraft carrier
Donald Trump has said ‘a massive armada’ led by the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln is heading to Iran (Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Daniel Kimmelman/US Navy/AP)

Mr Trump said time was running out for Iran to make a “fair and equitable deal”, including abandoning its nuclear weapons programme, or “the next attack will be far worse”.

In the Commons, Mr Lammy was urged by Liberal Democrat Sarah Olney to proscribe the IRGC, the regime’s military wing.

The Deputy Prime Minister said: “I utterly condemn the Iranian regime’s brutal repression of peaceful protesters.”

But he said it was “a long-standing position under successive governments not to comment on whether a specific organisation is being considered for proscription”.

He pointed to sanctions already placed on Iran and said the Government was “working at pace… to explore what further measures can be taken”.