During a
Friday Prayer on 4 August 2006, Jannati asserted that "support for
Hezbollah" was "a duty." Regarding
Iraq, around the time its draft constitution was presented to parliament in 2005, he said: "Fortunately, after years of effort and expectations in Iraq, an Islamic state has come to power and the constitution has been established on the basis of Islamic precepts".
On election protests In a Friday prayer sermon on 29 January 2010 in Tehran, Jannati praised Iranian judicial authorities for executing two political dissidents the day before and urged officials to continue executing dissidents until opposition protests end. Jannati sees leniency with the dissidents as un-Islamic. "God ordered the prophet Muhammad to brutally slay hypocrites and ill-intentioned people who stuck to their convictions. Koran insistently orders such deaths. May God not forgive anyone showing leniency toward the corrupt on Earth." Responding to clerics such as Jannati wanting to speed up executions, Iran's judiciary chief firmly stated his opposition, commenting that it was against the
Sharia and Iranian law: "Political assumptions should not influence judicial investigations because we won't have a response before God should an innocent person be punished due to hasty action."
On the United States In a 1 June 2007 speech aired on Iranian TV Channel 1 (as translated by
MEMRI), Jannati stated: Today, we can see that even in America, people are increasingly inclined towards Islam. In other countries, the Islamic revival has begun. People are increasingly inclined towards the Koran, towards Islam, towards the Islamic Revolution and the Imam [Khomeini]. Just like this movement destroyed the monarchical regime here, it will definitely destroy the arrogant rule of the hegemony of America,
Israel, and their allies. [...] At the end of the day, we are an anti-American regime. America is our enemy, and we are the enemies of America. The hostility between us is not a personal matter. It is a matter of principle. We are in disagreement over the very principles that underlie our revolution and our Islam. In April 2008, he stated, "You cried: 'Death to the
Shah' and indeed, he died. You cried: '
Death to Israel' and it is now on its deathbed. You cry: '
Death to America', and before long, Allah willing, the prayer for the dead will be recited over it." In the same speech, he stated: "The military philosophy of Islam is to create a force with in Islam that will be the most powerful force, which no one can defeat." On 17 September 2010, Jannati "described the recent desecration of the holy Quran in the United States [as] an insane behavior," apparently referring to the
2010 Qur'an-burning controversy. In the same
Friday Prayer, he reportedly claimed that "
opinion polls reveal[ed] that 84 percent of the Americans consider
the US administration responsible for
9/11 attacks." The Ayatollah's comments about Americans' opinions about 9/11 were cited by analysts after
President Ahmadinejad made similar comments, amongst others, the next week at the
United Nations. The president's speech sparked at least 33 delegations to walk out from the
General Assembly, and ensuing criticism. In a sermon in Tehran, which was broadcast on Iran's Channel 1 on 21 February 2014 (as translated by MEMRI), Jannati told a crowd that "If we, the people, are against America, you [Iranian leaders] must oppose it too" and that "Death to America" was "the first option on our table...This is the slogan of our entire people, without exception. This is our number one slogan."
On hijab Jannati takes a strong stand in favor of compulsory
hijab, or covering for women. In June 2010, he spoke out against Iranian President Ahmadinejad for his alleged laxness on compulsory hijab in Iran. After Ahmadinejad proposed a "cultural campaign" to combat loose hijab rather than a police crackdown, Jannati responded, "Drug traffickers are hanged, terrorists are executed and robbers are punished for their crimes, but when it comes to the law of God, which is above
human rights," some individuals "stay put and speak about cultural programs." ==Public image==