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Iran's Amhadinejad criticized at home

 
 
mlurp
 
Reply Tue 23 Oct, 2007 08:46 am
Wanted to post this in some thread but so many have ongoing conversations.
So here it is. I guess no matter what he says this man has learned from Bush, put them that are loyal in positions you want to keep the mirrors working.

Iran's Amhadinejad criticized at home By ALI AKBAR DAREINI, Associated Press Writer
48 minutes ago



TEHRAN, Iran - Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad cut short a two-day visit to Armenia to return home Tuesday, an Armenian spokesman said, at a time when the Iranian leader's has come under criticism even by fellow conservatives for his replacement of the top nuclear negotiator.

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It was not known if the interruption of the visit was linked to the controversy. Ahmadinejad may have sought to avoid angering Turkey by visiting a genocide memorial in Armenia.

The Iranian president told Armenian President Robert Kocharian late Monday that he needed to skip Tuesday's planned events because of unexpected developments in Iran that needed immediate attention, Armenian presidential spokesman Viktor Sogomonian said. The spokesman gave no details.

Landing in Tehran on Tuesday, Ahmadinejad insisted the trip was not cut short, saying it had been scheduled to last 22 hours and in fact went 90 minutes over. He called the visit "good."

While the president was in Armenia a day earlier, he was facing increasing criticism at home over the surprise resignation of top nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani, who was replaced by a close Ahmadinejad loyalist.

The resignation over the weekend has been widely interpreted as a victory for Ahmadinejad because it could lead Iran to take an even tougher stance in ongoing nuclear talks with the West. Though a conservative, Larijani was considered more moderate than Ahmadinejad within Iran's hardline camp, and the two men had previously clashed on how to approach the talks.

But Larijani's removal could further undermine Ahmadinejad in Iran. While the Iranian president has drawn tremendous worldwide attention for his fiery rhetoric, he faces criticism at home, including from past supporters, who say he has failed to improve Iran's economy and unnecessarily worsened the standoff with the West. Even some in top echelons of the clerical leadership headed by Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, have expressed concern.

On Monday, 183 lawmakers, most of them conservatives, passed a measure praising Larijani's performance as nuclear negotiator, a clear sign of displeasure with his departure. A parliamentary group wrote a letter of complaint to Ahmadinejad for failing to inform them of the resignation in advance or consult with them on Larijani's successor.

Saeed Jalili, a little-known deputy foreign minister for European and American affairs considered loyal to Ahmadinejad, is the new negotiator. He, along with Larijani, is due to talk about the nuclear program with the European Union's foreign policy chief Tuesday in Rome.

Conservative lawmaker Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh criticized the changes, saying "the calamity of repeated dismissals and replacements has become a policy in this government, a move that not only has not brought any improvements but also has damaged progress both in the domestic and foreign arenas."

The U.S. and its allies accuse Iran of seeking to develop nuclear weapons. The United Nations has already imposed two rounds of limited sanctions over Iran's refusal to suspend enrichment, and Washington is pressing for a third. Oil-rich Iran says its program is for peaceful purposes including generating electricity.

Larijani backed Iran's uranium enrichment program, but favored diplomacy to resolve the standoff. He negotiated a deal with the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency to explain outstanding questions over the nuclear program.

On the other hand, Ahmadinejad has vowed not to suspend uranium enrichment even for a single minute and not give up "one iota" of the right to enrich uranium, a technology that can be used to produce nuclear fuel or materials for a bomb.

Mohammad Reza Bahonar, a prominent conservative and Ahmadinejad supporter, praised Larijani as an "outstanding figure," in an indirect criticism of the president, and suggested Ahmadinejad had pushed him out.

"Larijani had almost reached a deadlock in working with the president. Both of them had come to the conclusion that they could not work together," several newspapers quoted Bahonar as saying.

According to Bahonar, Larijani had tendered his resignation three times in the past but Ahmadinejad accepted the resignation the fourth time after Larijani's insistence.

The move also adds to questions over how much support Ahmadinejad has from Khamenei. Larijani reported directly to Khamenei, who has final say in all state issues, and his replacement could not have occurred without Khamenei's consent.

But that consent may not necessarily be a sign of the supreme leader's backing for Ahmadinejad.

Some observers said Khamenei, who has been silent over the changes, may be giving the president more leeway on the nuclear dossier to be in a better position to reel him in if his policies lead to a new round of U.N. sanctions.

"Larijani's replacement leaves no pretext for Ahmadinejad to justify his failures in the future. His failures, despite being given a free hand, will only facilitate his humiliating exit from Iranian politics," political analyst Hamid Reza Shokouhi said.

Ahmadinejad was elected on a populist agenda in 2005, promising to bring oil revenues to every family, eradicate poverty and tackle unemployment.

But under his rule, Iran has seen dramatic price increases in housing and basic commodities, fueling criticism of the president. Inflation further worsened after a 25 percent hike in fuel prices in May. Some protesters burned down gas stations in June when fuel rationing was imposed.
Iran's Amhadinejad criticized at home - Yahoo! News
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mlurp
 
  1  
Reply Tue 23 Oct, 2007 04:58 pm
@mlurp,
What no replies. Hummmmm. well this is adding to the early post.......

Iran, EU see further nuclear talks by end-Nov By Robin Pomeroy and Phil Stewart
2 hours, 12 minutes ago



ROME (Reuters) - Iranian negotiators and the EU hope for more talks on Iran's nuclear program in coming weeks after a "constructive" meeting on Tuesday, despite a warning by Iran's president that his country would not retreat "one iota."

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The first meeting with Western diplomats for Iran's newly-appointed chief negotiator Saeed Jalili was overshadowed by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's rejection of calls to suspend uranium enrichment -- the key demand of the U.N. Security Council.

Iran's refusal to halt work that can be used to make fuel for power plants or, if it wants, material for warheads, has prompted two sets of U.N. Security Council sanctions. The West fears Iran's nuclear program could be aimed at making bombs.

Jalili, accompanied by his predecessor Ali Larijani to the talks with European Union diplomatic chief Javier Solana, said Tehran supported dialogue with the West and saw the talks as an opportunity to forge better ties with Europe.

"The basic principle of the Islamic Republic of Iran is dialogue and cooperation -- the course that our dear brother Dr. Larijani has traveled with in the past two years," Jalili told a joint news conference with Larijani and Solana.

"The meeting of today has been constructive," said Solana, adding that it was "very likely we will have the opportunity of meeting again before the end of the month of November."

World powers have agreed to delay further penalties on Iran at least until November to see if Iran cooperates with U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors, and to await a report by Solana.

Solana's mandate is to explore the scope for entering formal negotiations with Iran on international requests that it halt sensitive nuclear activities.

"RIGHT TO NUCLEAR TECHNOLOGY"

Tehran insists its nuclear program is aimed at producing electricity so it can preserve its oil and gas for export.

"We are in favor of talks but we will not negotiate with anyone about our right to nuclear technology," Ahmadinejad was quoted as saying by Iranian state television during a trip to Armenia. "Iran will not retreat one iota."

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Iran was breaking the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and sanctions could follow.

Israeli premier Ehud Olmert, speaking alongside Brown, said economic measures were "not sufficient."

Ahead of the Rome talks, a U.S. official said Solana would make a "similar offer" to a proposal by Russia's Vladimir Putin: a foreign-built civil nuclear system for electricity without access to "more sensitive" aspects of nuclear technology.

"We've offered diplomacy, they keep rejecting diplomacy, so I really think the ball is in their court," U.S. Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Nicholas Burns said in New York.

U.S. officials fear Security Council backing for a third sanctions resolution might meet Russian opposition. But British Foreign Secretary David Miliband said in Washington he was confident both Russia and China would support a third round of U.N. sanctions.

U.S. President George W. Bush has said a nuclear-armed Iran could lead to a third world war.

With speculation rife that Jalili's appointment might signal a harder line in Tehran, Larijani said the change should be seen as normal rotation of posts.

"Our country is a democratic country," he said, adding that Jalili was "seven or eight years" his junior and "energetic."

(Additional reporting by Parisa Hafezi and Zahra Hosseinian in Tehran, Mark John in Brussels, Jeffrey Heller in London, Claudia Parsons in New York and Louis Charbonneau in Berlin)


Iran, EU see further nuclear talks by end-Nov - Yahoo! News
0 Replies
 
Pinochet73
 
  1  
Reply Tue 23 Oct, 2007 07:32 pm
@mlurp,
President Tom will be glad to know I saw the Hidden Imam today outside an HEB near my school. He came out of hiding long enough to buy another bottle of Maddog 20/20. I gave him a buck to that end. Now....if I can just figure out how to get in touch with Tom.
Whatever cv
 
  1  
Reply Wed 24 Oct, 2007 08:38 am
@Pinochet73,
Pinochet73;42845 wrote:
President Tom will be glad to know I saw the Hidden Imam today outside an HEB near my school. He came out of hiding long enough to buy another bottle of Maddog 20/20. I gave him a buck to that end. Now....if I can just figure out how to get in touch with Tom.


Cat got your tongue?

These CIA plants are getting real tiresome to the middle east...remember that former Iraqi national who wanted to be king in Iraq?

Gee....Bush has a way of screwing up everything, does he not?
Pinochet73
 
  1  
Reply Wed 24 Oct, 2007 06:07 pm
@Whatever cv,
Whatever!;42897 wrote:
Cat got your tongue?

These CIA plants are getting real tiresome to the middle east...remember that former Iraqi national who wanted to be king in Iraq?

Gee....Bush has a way of screwing up everything, does he not?


Are you a 'Twelver'? Do you believe in the 12th Imam?:peace:
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