Iran calls US election a 'spectacle,' says it is a clear sign of 'decline'
While Ayatollah Khamenei was more biting in his statement, other state advisers took more diplomatic stances
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Iran responded to the announcement of Joe Biden as the projected U.S. president-elect with ridicule, but reports indicate the Middle East nation ultimately sees President Trump's loss as a positive.
Many world leaders congratulated Biden after media outlets projected him to win the 2020 U.S. presidential election, but Iran stood strong in its criticism of a nation with which it has had a tumultuous relationship.
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Ayatollah Ali Khamenei of Iran used the moment to issue a statement that made it clear he has no love for America -- regardless of the election result.
Calling the election a "spectacle," he declared the process "an example of the ugly face of liberal democracy."
"Regardless of the outcome, one thing is absolutely clear," Khamenei wrote. "The definite political, civil, & moral decline of the US regime."
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Iranian Vice President Eshagh Jahangiri spoke more diplomatically, according to Reuters.
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“I hope we will see a change in the destructive policies of the United States, a return to the rule of law and international obligations and respect for nations” Jahangiri said, according to state media.
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Other statements from Iranian advisers indicate the administration ultimately sees Trump's election defeat as a positive.
Presidential adviser Hesameddin Ashena tweeted that "the Iranians stood until the coward left," making it clear in subsequent tweets that the "coward" refers to Trump.
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Ashena described "national efforts and Islamic zeal" in the effort to remain unbowed, and warned that "if Biden comes, we also tell him that it is a mistake to test the tested."
“Tehran sees Trump’s defeat as a vindication of its resistance policy. This will have devastating consequences for those who think diplomacy with Iran post-Trump will be cheap or easy,” Behnam Ben Taleblu, a senior fellow at think-tank FDD in Washington, told Reuters.
Biden's victory could lead to renewed discussions between the U.S. and Iran, which would return long-discussed topics to the table, including Iran's nuclear program.
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Biden has said he plans to return to the 2015 nuclear deal that President Obama's administration struck with Iran, from which Trump withdrew in 2018.