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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Tribune News Service

Nation and world news briefs

Iran blasted as 'leading sponsor' of terrorism in new US report

WASHINGTON _ The Trump administration Wednesday continued its sharp criticism of Iran, labeling Tehran the world's top government sponsor of terrorism.

In a new report, the State Department said terrorist attacks and deaths from terrorism declined worldwide last year. The Islamic State militant group remained the most active "non-state" perpetrator, the report said, despite having suffered a significant loss of territory.

The document, formally titled Country Reports on Terrorism 2016, is issued annually under congressional mandate.

A section on state sponsors of terrorism highlights Iran, its arming of the Hezbollah organization based in Lebanon and anti-Israel groups like Hamas, plus its support for Syrian President Bashar Assad, whom the U.S. accuses of committing numerous atrocities against his citizenry.

"Iran is the leading state sponsor of terrorism," Justin Siberell, the State Department's acting coordinator for counterterrorism, said in a briefing for reporters.

Iran has been on the list since 1984.

The report noted that Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps served as the government's "primary mechanism for cultivating and supporting terrorists abroad."

Hezbollah also made an appearance in the report in discussion about Venezuela, which came under heaviest criticism among Western Hemisphere countries.

"For the 11th consecutive year, the Department of State determined ... that Venezuela was not cooperating fully with U.S. counter-terrorism efforts," the report said, noting the leftist Caracas government had provided safe haven for Hezbollah "supporters and sympathizers," along with other militants like Colombian guerrillas and Basque separatists.

The State Department report, citing statistics compiled by the University of Maryland, said the total number of terrorist attacks in 2016 decreased by 9 percent from 11,774 in 2015 to 11,072. Deaths from terror attacks fell 13 percent in the same year, from 28,328 to 25,621. Sixteen of the dead were American citizens.

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