The "American empire" will fall this year, the head of Iran's Basij forces claimed Sunday, a message that was approved by the Islamic regime's supreme leader.

"America should not think that with some diplomatic dialogue it can solve its dossier (problem) with the nation of Iran," Brig. Gen. Mohammad Reza Naghdi said. "The path of this land is directed by the martyrs. America with its hollow slogans ... thinks the Iranian nation will believe it."

The Basij commander was speaking to an audience of the 10th conference of "Journey of Enlightened Land" commemorating the "martyrs" of the eight-year war with Iraq, according to the Journalist Club, an outlet run by the Revolutionary Guards intelligence division.

Naghdi called President Obama's actions deceitful, saying, "Obama in letters sent to the Islamic Republic promised to put an end to the Iranian nuclear dossier but ... reacted in a different way."

As reported in January 2012, Iranian officials revealed the contents of an Obama letter to Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, that indicated a deep desire by the U.S. president for a dialogue with the radical leaders of Iran. Iranian officials also claimed that a subsequent oral message by Obama delivered through the Swiss ambassador in Tehran was even more revealing than the letter delivered to the Iranian supreme leader.

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Hossein Ebrahimi, the vice chairman of the Iranian Parliament's National Security and Foreign Policy Commission, said last year that in a meeting between Swiss Ambassador Livia Leu Agosti and Iranian Foreign Ministry officials, Agosti informed the Iranian officials that Obama recognizes Iran's right of access to and use of nuclear technology.

Ebarhimi also disclosed another important point that the Swiss diplomat delivered: Obama said that "I didn't want to impose sanctions on your central bank, but I had no options but to approve it since a Congress majority had approved the decision."

The Basij commander called Obama the most seditious president in the history of America: "Within this period, nothing but betrayal has been witnessed by Obama as the president of America. ... America with its enmity toward Iran ... has surrounded the country with sanctions." Under the supreme leader's request, Naghdi warned that "The epic political movement this year will be the fall of the American empire and the revealing of its true face of cruelty by its politicians."

Naghdi was born in Iraq and moved to Iran after the Iranian Revolution, joining the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq. He later joined the Quds Forces, which is involved in international terrorism.

In October 2009, Khamanei appointed Naghdi to command the Basij paramilitary forces. Naghdi has been sanctioned by the U.S. as a violator of human rights for having participated in the suppression of the Iranian people.

Naghdi previously had threatened to kill American generals in response to the assassination of Iranian nuclear scientists.

He said at the time, "We will mark the hanging sites of the American and Zionist generals and we will identify which hanging was in retaliation for the blood of our great martyr."

At Sunday's ceremony, Naghdi, as promised, presented "The Wet Gunpowder" award to first lady Michelle Obama. The award is given to those who "unknowingly and unwillingly" have contributed greatly to the Islamic Revolution. The prize was sent to the Swiss Embassy in Tehran to be handed over to American officials for delivery to Mrs. Obama.

As WND reported March 14, Naghdi had announced that Iran would give the first lady a special award for allegedly exposing a direct link between Hollywood and the White House. He cited her announcement of the "anti-Iran" movie "Argo" Oscar for Best Picture in a live feed from the White House Feb. 24.

"Mrs. Obama's action was awesome," Naghdi said with what he described as irony, "and if we had spent billions of dollars, we could not show a link and allegiance between Hollywood and the U.S. government and the White House, especially since they have always denied the allegations."

During the past months, U.S. officials, including Vice President Joe Biden and Secretary of the State John Kerry, have repeatedly announced the Obama administration's willingness to hold bilateral talks with Iran. Although the supreme leader in his latest remarks on the occasion of the Iranian New Year said he would not object to such talks, he said that America was the "center of all conspiracies and the No. 1 enemy" of the Islamic regime.

See the evidence that Iran has crossed the "red line" and is working on nuclear weaponry.