KERMAN, Iran 鈥 Iranian officials tried Friday to link Israel and the United States to an Islamic State group-claimed suicide bombing while speaking to a mass funeral for some of the 89 people killed in the attack, seeking to intertwine the assault with wider Middle East tensions from the Israel-Hamas war.
Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi and the top commander of Iran鈥檚 paramilitary Revolutionary Guard sought to link without offering evidence for their claims. The gathered crowd in front of flag-draped caskets shouted in response: 鈥淒eath to America!鈥 and 鈥淒eath to Israel!鈥
鈥淭he enemy always sees the power of the Islamic Republic. The whole world is recognizing this power and this ability,鈥 Raisi said, without directly naming any country. 鈥淏e sure, the initiative is in the hands of our powerful forces. The place and time will be determined by our forces.鈥
READ: Islamic State claims responsibility for deadly Iran attack, Tehran vows revenge
Iranian state television also sought to link America to the attack. At one point, it re-broadcast comments from 2016 from then-presidential candidate Donald Trump, who wrongly accused then-President Barack Obama of being the 鈥渇ounder鈥 of the extremist group.
Critics have blamed Obama鈥檚 decision to pull troops from Iraq in 2011 for allowing the group, once an affiliate of al-Qaida, to thrive and ultimately hold vast swaths of Iraq and Syria in its self-declared caliphate by 2014. US troops under both Obama and Trump then battled alongside allied forces to retake that territory.
Gen. Hossein Salami, the commander of the Guard, similarly sought to make the connection.
鈥淭hey can only act as agents and mercenaries of American politics and Zionism,鈥 Salami said. 鈥淏ut we give them this warning, 鈥 wherever you are, we will find you. You cannot avoid divine punishment by disappearing. If you live for 1,000 years, we will find you.鈥
In Wednesday鈥檚 attack, one suicide bomber killed himself, then another attacked 20 minutes later as people and emergency workers tried to help the wounded in Kerman, about 820 kilometers (510 miles) southeast of the capital, Tehran.
READ: Iran vows revenge after deadliest attacks since 1979 revolution
On Friday, the intelligence ministry said in a statement published by its website, vaja.ir, that one of the two suicide bombers was a Tajik national. It said the other鈥檚 nationality was not clear yet. The statement added that after the attack, in the early hours of Thursday, the base of the bombers was identified on the outskirts of Kerman and that a total of 11 people have been arrested.
The attack targeted a commemoration for Guard Gen. Qassem Soleimani, killed in 2020 by a US drone strike as he led its expeditionary Quds Force.
Soleimani had been part of the Iranian response to the Islamic State group in Syria, while focusing on keeping embattled Syrian President Bashar Assad in power. He also had extensive ties to proxy groups around the wider Mideast, including Hamas. But the US, which killed Soleimani as part of wider tensions over its collapsed nuclear deal with world powers, saw Soleimani as the mastermind behind deadly roadside bombings targeting American soldiers in Iraq.
The two attacks on Wednesday killed at least 89 people and wounded about 280 others, authorities said Friday in an update of the death toll. The attacks have sparked condemnation from around the world, even amid Iran鈥檚 wider tensions with the West over its nuclear program.
READ: Iran says at least 95 killed in blasts at ceremony honoring slain general
Pope Francis offered a condolence telegram to express his deep sadness over the 鈥渓oss of life caused by the recent explosions in Kerman,鈥 the Vatican said on Friday.
Francis 鈥渋nvokes upon all the people of Iran the Almighty鈥檚 blessings of wisdom and peace,鈥 the Vatican said.
The Islamic State group claimed the attack Thursday in a statement that named the two bombers and described it as part of a new campaign linked to Israel鈥檚 war in the Gaza Strip. The statement bore some differences to previous claims made by the Islamic State group in other attacks it has claimed in Iran, though experts said it appeared to be legitimate and came from online channels associated with the extremists. Much of the group鈥檚 leadership has been killed and replaced in the years since 2014.
It鈥檚 unclear why the two Iranian leaders chose to focus on the U.S. and Israel, rather than on the Islamic State group, during their remarks Friday. Iran has retaliated in the past over IS-claimed attacks, including launching ballistic missiles into Syria.
However, the Islamic State group has grown stronger in recent years in neighboring Afghanistan, just some 360 kilometers (225 miles) east of Kerman, since the Western-backed government in Kabul fell to the Taliban in 2021.
Iran and the Taliban have maintained diplomatic ties since the takeover, though there have been border skirmishes and tensions over water supplies between the two nations. Iranian officials say at least 12 of the dead in Wednesday鈥檚 bombings were Afghans.