You are here

Iran's Rouhani stands by ally Zarif after surprise resignation

By Reuters - Feb 26,2019 - Last updated at Feb 26,2019

DUBAI/GENEVA — President Hassan Rouhani stood behind one of his highest profile allies in Iran's moderate faction on Tuesday, holding back from accepting the resignation Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, which an ally blamed on criticism of the 2015 nuclear deal. 

Zarif — the US-educated veteran diplomat who served as the architect of the pact which curbed Iran's nuclear programme in exchange for sanctions relief — gave no reason for his decision to quit when he announced it on Instagram on Monday.

But the announcement thrust the schism between Iran's hardliners and moderates into the open, effectively challenging Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to pick a side.

An ally of Zarif said his resignation was motivated by criticism of the nuclear agreement, which has come under increasingly intense fire in Iran since the United States abandoned it last year.

"There were closed-door meetings every week, where top officials were bombarding him with questions about the deal and what will happen next and so on," a Zarif ally told Reuters on condition of anonymity. "He and his boss [Rouhani] were under a huge amount of pressure."

Since the United States walked out of the nuclear deal and reimposed sanctions last year, Rouhani has had to explain why Iran has continued to abide by its restrictions while reaping virtually none of the foreseen economic benefits. 

Despite announcing his resignation, Zarif had yet to officially tender it to Rouhani, who had yet to accept it by Tuesday afternoon.

But Rouhani signalled his support for Zarif by saying he had been at the forefront of the fight against America, in comments reported by state news agency IRNA. Lawmakers representing the majority moderate faction sent Rouhani a letter asking him to keep Zarif on, IRNA reported.

Rouhani’s Chief of Staff Mahmoud Vaezi said Rouhani stood by Zarif. The president’s praise was “a clear sign of the satisfaction of the representative of the people of Iran about the wise and effective positions and work of Dr Zarif”, Vaezi wrote on Instagram. 

Lawmaker Ali Motahari, like other politicians from both camps, said Rouhani was unlikely to accept Zarif’s resignation since no one else could fill the demanding post.

 

Schism

 

The schism between hardliners and moderates over the nuclear deal shows the tension in Iran between the two factions, and between the elected government which runs the country on a day-to-day basis and a clerical establishment with ultimate power.

Rouhani won landslide elections in 2013 and 2017 on promises of reform, while Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in power since 1989, is seen as above factional fighting but sympathetic to the hardliners. Although Rouhani is responsible for choosing ministers, Khamenei traditionally has the last say.

“If he [Khamenei] publicly backs Zarif and Rouhani, this crisis will be over in a good way and it will narrow the gap between different political camps in the country,” said an official.

The political uncertainty comes at a difficult time for Iran’s leaders as the newly
reimposed US sanctions have dashed hopes of an economic breakthrough. Rouhani has warned that the country is facing the worst economic crisis in 40 years. 

Hardships have triggered waves of nation-wide protests, with calls for both Rouhani and clerical leaders to step down.

Some unconfirmed Iranian media reports indicated Zarif resigned because he had not been informed about a visit by Syrian President Bashar Assad on Monday. 

Zarif was quoted as condemning “factional fighting” in a newspaper interview published on Tuesday — suggesting political tensions may have played a part in his decision. The Fars news agency reported that the interview had taken place last week, before Zarif’s resignation.

A former pro-reform official warned of dire consequences of Zarif’s resignation is accepted.

“Hardliners will be strengthened and any kind of reform will be buried for at least 10 years.”

up
7 users have voted.


Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF