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Brazil's Lula criticises Trump's threats and says leaders should seek to respect

Brazil's Luiz Inacio Lula Da Silva delivered a?blatant critique of the?U.S. In an interview published by El Pais on Thursday, President Donald Trump said that world leaders should not rule with fear but rather respect.

Lula said that Trump had no right to threaten a nation in the morning, referring specifically to his threat to 'wipe out the Iranian civilisation' as part of the U.S. and Israeli war against Iran.

"He was not elected for that, and his Constitution does not allow it."

Lula, who will meet with another leftist Trump critic, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez on Friday, in Barcelona, called Trump's foreign policy "a misguided game", driven by the assumption that Washington has the military and economic power to set the rules.

Lula continued, "Nobody has the right to scare others." It's important that the powerful assume greater responsibility in maintaining peace.

The Brazilian President described himself as an individual who prefers respect over fear.

After a surprise raid on Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro by U.S. Special Forces in Caracas on January 3, he called for free and fair elections without any interference from Washington.

"What can't happen is that the U.S. thinks it can run Venezuela. Lula said that this is not normal and has no place in a democratic country.

Lula and Trump have had many clashes over the past decade. Trump was a close ally and supporter of his main opponent in the last elections, former far-right president Jair Bolsonaro. Bolsonaro is currently serving a sentence of 27 years for plotting to stay in power.

Lula, who is 80 years old, alluded also to the advanced age of both he and Trump when he remembered how he called for'restraint' when Trump, aged 79, imposed heavy?tariffs against Brazil and sanctioned the judges handling Bolsonaro's case. Later, the sanctions were removed and tariffs reversed.

Lula stated that "two countries led by two gentlemen who are in their 80s should speak with maturity." (Reporting and editing by David Latona, William Maclean, Andrei Khalip)

(source: Reuters)