US President Donald Trump threatened Iran, hovered the idea of deporting US citizens who were convicted of crimes, and said that Palestinians might not have an alternative, but the Gaza in far-reaching comments on reporters on Tuesday in the White House.
In Iran, Trump said that he had told his consultants that he should wipe out the country if it murdered him.
“If they did that, they would be wiped out,” he said when he signed an executive regulation in which the US government asked Tehran to impose maximum pressure. “There will be nothing left.”
The Ministry of Justice submitted federal laws in November because of a suspected Iranian conspiracy to kill Trump before the presidential elections.
The department claimed that the Iranian officials had instructed Farhad Shakeri (51) in September to concentrate on the measurement and ultimately murder Trump. Shakeri is still at large in Iran.
Mull’s deportation of the US prisoners
With regard to the US prisoners, Trump said that he was studying the legality of sending dangerous criminals to other countries in prisons.
“If we had the legal right, I would do it immediately,” he said. “I don’t know that we are doing it. We are looking at it right now.”
Trump did not say which countries could bring us to prisoners.
However, after Foreign Minister Marco Rubio said that El Salvador had offered to bring some violent American criminals to prison, and that the offer was “very generous” – although there were some legal concerns.
Suggests a permanent expulsion of the Palestinians
On Tuesday, Trump confirmed his call to the Palestinians to leave the enclave “permanently” on Tuesday, which he described as “demolition location” after Israel’s war with the militants of Hamas.
“I don’t think people should return to Gaza,” said Trump, sitting in the oval office with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
“You can’t live in the Gaza at the moment. I think we need a different place,” said Trump.
Israel removed its blockages of the North Gaza Strip and allowed thousands of Palestinians to return to their communities – even if their houses were destroyed. In the meantime, families in Israel are waiting for the saying whether and when hostages are published.
“I think in beautiful houses where they are happy and not being shot and are not killed and cannot be measured to death like what happens in the Gaza.”
Trump asked Jordan, Egypt and other Arab countries to temporarily take Palestinians from Gaza, while the reconstruction takes place in the enclave after the devastating war between Hamas and Israel. His call on Tuesday was the first time that he hovered publicly, which made this new settlement permanently.
“I hope we could do something where you don’t want to return,” said Trump. “Who would want to go back? You have experienced nothing but death and destruction.”
Trump’s statements reflect the wishes of Israel and contradict the commitment of former President Joe Biden against the mass shift of the Palestinians.
The Arab states and the Palestinian authority rejected the idea that some human rights representatives compared with ethnic cleansing.
The Palestinians claim Gaza as part of a future home, and many have given the desire to stay and rebuild.