Counselor of Supreme Leader of Iran Ayatollah Ali Hameni said today that his country would not allow a corridor to be created in the Caucasus, a plan supported by US President Donald Trump, who will link Azerbaijan with Azeri.

“The implementation of this conspiracy would endanger the safety of the South Caucasus and Iran stressed that with or without Russia, he would take steps to guarantee the security of the southern Caucasus,” Ali Akbar Velagia said at the Tasnim News Agency.

“We also believe that Russia is strategically opposed to this corridor,” he added.

The agreement, in Washington, in Washington by Azerbaijan Ilham Aliev’s president and Armenian Prime Minister Nicole Pasinian, is putting an end to the territorial conflict, which has faced one country for decades.

The agreement provides for the creation of a crossing zone that crosses Armenia to connect Azerbaijan with the Azeri enclave, a long -standing claim by Baku.

The United States will have development rights for the corridor, called “Trump corridor for international peace and prosperity” (Tripp, its acronym in English) in this strategy and hydrocarbon -rich area.

Iran has long opposed this corridor, as it fears it will cut it off the Caucasus and bring a foreign presence to its borders.

This morning, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Arakzi welcomed the peace agreement between Geravan and Baku, reached by Washington’s mediation, but warned “any foreign intervention” taking into account the rights of the United States.