God May have Sent Trump to Save Israel from Iran- Pompeo

US Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo has said it is "possible" that President Donald
Trump was sent by God to save Israel from Iran.
In an
interview with the Christian Broadcasting Network during a high-profile trip to
Israel, he said it was his faith that made him believe that.
He also
praised US efforts to "make sure that this democracy in the Middle East,
that this Jewish state, remains".
The comments
came on a Jewish holiday celebrating rescue from genocide.
The holiday,
Purim, commemorates the biblical rescue of the Jewish people by Queen Esther
from the Persians, as the interviewer noted to Mr Pompeo.
He was asked
if "President Trump right now has been sort of raised for such a time as
this, just like Queen Esther, to help save the Jewish people from an Iranian
menace".
"As a
Christian, I certainly believe that's possible," said Mr Pompeo, a former
Kansas senator and CIA director.
"I am
confident that the Lord is at work here," he added.
Mr Pompeo is
not the first Trump official to suggest a divine will behind Mr Trump's
actions: In January, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders told a religious
television network that God "wanted Donald Trump to become
president".
Vice-President
Mike Pence and former Attorney General Jeff Sessions have also referenced
Christianity or bible verses in official remarks.
His
administration is also the first in 100 years to have a Cabinet member
bible study group - of which Mr Pompeo was a member.
Since
becoming president, Mr Trump has sought a hard-line stance against Iran.
In May 2018,
Mr Trump withdrew the US from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action nuclear
deal, calling it "a horrible one-sided deal".
On Friday,
his administration imposed new sanctions on 14 individuals and 17 organisations
allegedly involved with Iran's nuclear programme, claiming Iran would not
answer questions about its weapons and research.
The new
sanctions have barred these individuals and organisations from accessing the US
financial system or any US assets.
And the
threat of secondary US sanctions also discourages other countries from doing
business with the targeted entities, making them "radioactive
internationally".
Also on
Thursday, Mr Trump announced a change in US policy toward the Golan Heights,
saying that the territory Israel has occupied from Syria since 1967 should be
recognised as part of Israel.
During Mr
Pompeo's tour of the Middle East, he came under fire for holding a conference
call and only inviting "faith-based" members of the media to join.
In recent
days, Mr Trump has accused his Democratic rivals of being
"anti-Israel" and "anti-Jewish".
The
president is due to meet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu next week,
when he is in Washington to attend the American Israel Public Affairs Committee
(Aipac) annual meeting.
The remarks
by Mr Pompeo, and the Golan announcement by Mr Trump, come just weeks before
Israeli elections are held on 9 April.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-
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