Donald Trump Leaves After Making a Statement on the Iranian Nuclear Agreement in the White House Diplomatic Reception Room, May 8, 2018. [19659007] Fox News headlines, Sean Hannity, and others have been circulating for a few days now. But it is based on the unfounded comments of a conservative Iranian priest, trying to hit the more moderate president Hassan Rouhani and his administration.
Iranian Secretary of State Mojtaba Zolnour attacked Rouhani and senior officials of his government as a sellout, stating in an interview in June, "When Obama, during the negotiations on the JCPOA, decided to do a favor to these men He granted citizenship to 2,500 Iranians and some officials launched a contest whose children could be part of these 2,500 Iranians, "according to the Iranian news agency Fars News.
Zolnour is an extremist member of the Iranian parliament, who helps to investigate whether dual citizens have "infiltrated" the Iranian government, according to Radio Farda, the Iranian-funded news service in Iran. United. Iran has arrested a handful of US and Iranian citizens that the Trump administration is trying to free.
Zolnour is also a "troglodyte", a "dol low-rent" and a "hardliner imbalanced with an extreme agenda," tweeted Borzou Daragahi, a journalist and senior member of the Atlantic Council.
Despite who made the claim – and that the state department and the Homeland Security Department did not confirm – several media reported the story anyway, that Trump then tweeted.
But there is no proof that this is true. Until now, neither the Trump administration has not responded to requests for evidence. Obama administration officials vehemently deny it.
"The allegation is absurd and entirely false," said Jeff Prescott, senior director of President Obama's National Security Council, in an email to ABC News. "It should be remembered that this is a case of Donald Trump parroting Fox News, who peddles the claims of a hardier Iranian."
According to statistics published by the Department of Homeland Security, there does not appear to be a significant increase in new US citizens or legal permanent residents of Iran over the last decade. There were 11,623 new US citizens born in Iran in 2013; 9,620 in 2014; 10,344 in 2015; and 9,507 in 2016. There were 12,863 new legal permanent residents born in Iran in 2013; 11,615 in 2014; 13,114 in 2015; and 13,298 in 2016.
Data for 2017 have not yet been released. Negotiations on the agreement with Iran began in 2013 and the pact was signed in 2015.