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Tehran, Iran • Iran's newly re-elected President Hassan Rouhani took barbed swipes Monday at the U.S. and its ally Saudi Arabia, hitting back at both a day after President Donald Trump used his first foreign trip to the kingdom to call for further isolation of Iran.

The 68-year-old cleric, a political moderate who secured a resounding victory over a hard-line opponent, called relations with the United States "a curvy road" even as he touted the 2015 nuclear accord Iran secured with the Obama administration and other world powers as a "win-win" agreement.

He was less flattering in his assessment of the Trump administration. Rouhani said that Iranians are "waiting for this government to become stable intellectually" and that "hopefully, things will settle down ... so we could pass more accurate judgments."

"The Americans do not know our region, that's what the catch is," Rouhani said in response to a question from The Associated Press. "Unfortunately, Americans have always made mistakes in our region," he continued. "When they attacked Afghanistan [and] Iraq, when they made sanctions against Iran. In Syria, they made mistakes, and also in Yemen."

Rouhani also criticized Saudi Arabia, Tehran's main regional rival, just hours after Trump departed the country bound for Israel. He said the Sunni-ruled kingdom "has never seen a ballot box," a pointed dig in the wake of Iran's presidential election Friday that drew long lines as more than 40 million people voted.

Rouhani further criticized the Saudi summit that Trump attended Sunday, describing it as a "show-off" that "will not have any political and practical values."

"The issue of terrorism cannot be solved through giving money to superpowers," Rouhani said. Iranian-backed forces have been fighting Islamic State militants in Iraq and support the government of President Bashar Assad in its battle against Sunni fighters in Syria. "Who can claim that stability of the region can be restored without Iran?" he said.

Rouhani made a point to stress that Trump's visit came amid Iran's presidential election, saying that such elections "are not in their [Saudis'] dictionary."