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Ahmadinejad Fires Manouchehr Mottaki, Iran's Foreign Minister

ALI AKBAR DAREINI and BRIAN MURPHY   12/13/10 03:26 PM ET   AP

Ahmadinejad

TEHRAN, Iran — Iran's president abruptly fired his foreign minister Monday and named the nuclear chief as acting top diplomat, the latest sign of a rift at the top levels of the Islamic theocracy as the country faces intense pressure from the West over its nuclear program.

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad gave no explanation for the change in a brief statement on his website. But the fired diplomat, Manouchehr Mottaki, is seen as close to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. And the president may be aiming to install a figure more personally loyal to himself as Tehran resumes critical talks with world powers over the nuclear program that has brought four rounds of U.N. sanctions on Iran.

The nuclear chief, Ali Akbar Salehi, is one of Ahmadinejad's 12 vice presidents.

"This move shows not only the internal tensions but the primacy of the nuclear issue as Iran's main foreign policy objective," said Rasool Nafisi, an expert on Iranian affairs at Strayer University in Virginia.

Just a week before the shake-up, Iran resumed negotiations with six world powers over its suspect nuclear program after a long hiatus and another round is planned for early next year. Four sets of U.N. sanctions appear to be biting into the Iranian economy and Ahmadinejad may be looking for a loyal foreign minister who will help him clinch a deal with the six powers to ease the punitive measures.

Mottaki, foreign minister since 2005, was fired in the middle of a tour of African nations that took him to Senegal, where he delivered a message from Ahmadinejad to the West African nation's leaders on Monday, according to the official IRNA news agency.

Mottaki made no immediate public comment on his dismissal.

A fourth round of sanctions was imposed in June over Iran's refusal to halt uranium enrichment, a key part of its nuclear program that is of international concern because it can be used both for making reactor fuel and atomic weapons. Iran insists its aims are entirely peaceful, but the U.N.'s International Atomic Energy Agency says its years of investigating have not been able to confirm that.

The sanctions are making it more difficult for Iran to trade with the outside world.

The president of Iran's chamber of commerce, Mohammad Nahavandian, said last month that import prices for most goods have risen by 15 to 30 percent because of sanctions. That is because companies, particularly Asian firms, are bumping up prices because they know Iran is now a desperate market and insurance is difficult – if not impossible – to obtain on shipments to Iran.

And many European firms avoid dealings with Iran or their banks refrain from transactions with Iran.

Some of the tensions between Ahmadinejad and Mottaki have spilled out into public in this closely guarded nation.

In the past year, Mottaki opposed a decision by Ahmadinejad to appoint his own special foreign envoys to key areas such as the Middle East, Afghanistan and the Caspian Sea region. Mottaki found the appointments embarrassing to the Foreign Ministry and allegedly took his complaint to the supreme leader. Khamenei has final say in all state matters in Iran. He also runs the nuclear program and stands at the top of the clerical leadership that rules the country.

Khamenei reportedly sided with Mottaki, forcing Ahmadinejad to moderate his position and change their title only to the level of advisers.

The difference was exposed in September when Mottaki publicly attacked Mohammad Baghaei, one of the four trusted foreign policy envoys appointed by Ahmadinejad, calling him an "inexperienced" figure who was "creating problems for the country's foreign policy." Mottaki overtly said that parallel foreign policy work must be avoided, a clear reference to Ahmadinejad appointees who operated outside the Foreign Ministry.

Iranian media have also reported in the past year that some lawmakers were pushing for Mottaki to be dismissed, arguing that he failed to adequately defend Iran at international organizations such as the United Nations.

Mottaki's dismissal also amounted to a show of force by Ahmadinejad as he battles with rivals within Iran's conservative camp – a split that grew during the turmoil sparked by his disputed re-election a year and a half ago. Mottaki has been an ally of one of those critics, parliament speaker Ali Larijani, who accuses the president of overstepping his bounds and seeking to cut parliament and others out of key decisions.

Mottaki was a backer of Larijani's presidential campaign in the 2005 election, which Ahmadinejad won. Nonetheless, he became Ahmadinejad's foreign minister.

It was not immediately clear how long Salehi – who holds a doctorate in nuclear physics from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the U.S. – would remain in the caretaker role. The semiofficial Fars news agency said Mohammad Ghannadi, a prominent nuclear scientist, is expected to replace Salehi as the new nuclear chief – an indication Ahmadinejad wants him to keep the job permanently. Ghannadi is currently Salehi's deputy at the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran.

Salehi – or any other candidate – has to win a vote of confidence from the 290-seat parliament to be appointed to the job.

Prominent conservative lawmaker Alaeddin Boroujerdi says he was stunned to hear the news, saying the parliament was not aware of Ahmadinejad's decision to dismiss Mottaki, according to khabaronline.ir news website.

The president thanked Mottaki for his more than five years of service – spanning Ahmadinejad's entire time in office.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said she did not expect Mottaki's dismissal to affect the nuclear talks, which should continue regardless of the officials involved.

"Our relationship with Iran is not toward any one individual," Clinton said during a visit to Canada. "It is toward the country, the government, which is complex and challenging to deal with because it is not just one channel, there are several channels because of the way their government is established."

The next round of talks between Iran and the five permanent U.N. Security Council members – the U.S., Britain, France, Russia and China – as well as Germany is scheduled for January.

___

Murphy reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Associated Press writer Matthew Lee in Wakefield, Quebec, contributed to this report.

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TEHRAN, Iran — Iran's president abruptly fired his foreign minister Monday and named the nuclear chief as acting top diplomat, the latest sign of a rift at the top levels of the Islamic theocrac...
TEHRAN, Iran — Iran's president abruptly fired his foreign minister Monday and named the nuclear chief as acting top diplomat, the latest sign of a rift at the top levels of the Islamic theocrac...
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03:09 PM on 12/15/2010
He must have been caught taking bribes from Israel.
02:42 AM on 12/15/2010
Motaki’s replacement is not legally eligible.

Per Iranian Constitution Laws; Iranian Presidents, Defense Ministers, and Foreign Ministers must be born in Iran from Iranian citizen parents. Salehi was born in Karbala Iraq.
"Ghanoon Madani Iran 900-995"
03:11 PM on 12/15/2010
I think WikiPedia made a mistake.
Ali Akbar Salehi is from Qazvin - Iran. They have famous families here in qazvin and his Grand Father volunteer of a mosque in qazvin.
I'm from Qazvin, Iran.
03:30 PM on 12/15/2010
Evidance(Farsi): http://www.qazvin.net/?type=dynamic&lang=1&id=14
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mdmccormick
I am tired of this BS
07:39 AM on 12/14/2010
pssst - Probably not a good idea to go home
03:09 AM on 12/14/2010
Watch for the steam of crockodile tears wheeping for Mottaki and how he is the latest victim of IRGC taking over. Never mind he was part of the Ahmadi administration that "launched" the tankless, general-less, army-less coup.
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fairwayhill
1948 Palestine belongs to the Palestinians
02:39 AM on 12/14/2010
So called "lsrael" is stolen Palestine.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Khirad
01:02 PM on 12/16/2010
Ah, displaying your knowledge of internal Iranian politics yet again are we?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
persianadvocate
01:11 AM on 12/14/2010
MOSSADEGH WAS OVERTHROWN UNDER THE SAME FALSE PRETENSES - THAT HE TORTURED HIS PEOPLE:
http://www.filedropper.com/mossadeghplayswithfire

Source: Aug 15, 1953 - just 2 weeks before Operation AJAX

The download link is the gray button that says Download File (not the green download one - that's an ad - free file sharing sorry)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
persianadvocate
02:02 AM on 12/14/2010
Source is NY Times - available on Microfilm / Microfiche at nearly any reputable library :)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
persianadvocate
02:02 AM on 12/14/2010
AND ALSO NOW ON 10,000 IRANIAN-AMERICAN HARD DRIVES
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheRock Barkat
12:11 AM on 12/14/2010
Obviously this is the right man for the job at this moment. You dont want to have a Moldovian nightclub bouncer as a Foreign Minister you have an intellectual who can discuss the matters at hand knowledgeably and with confidence, not reading from a script or prepared answers.
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karim banned
A fool's mind is at the mercy of his tongue and a
12:32 AM on 12/14/2010
He is so good that he is actually threatening Obama at the end of the interview and still is perceived to be calm. Look from minute 21:00.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5GR3KyiXhdY&feature=player_embedded
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
persianadvocate
01:58 AM on 12/14/2010
check out the file I linked above and you will see history is just repeating itself for a 3rd time...
02:01 AM on 12/14/2010
thanks for the link
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
persianadvocate
06:53 PM on 12/13/2010
Do you see my avatar? That is a true Iranian. Despite what the ideologies were, he saw a hurt person and helped him. It's called reconciliation. Do you know the horrors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki? Did you hear about the Dante's Inferno on Earth that befell those people with two of the deadliest bombs ever? How is it that Japan flourishes after THAT? If ANYONE was entitled to revenge, it was them, especially since we found out they now offered to surrender. But they didn't seek that route, they reconciled and, today, Japan is modern, progressive, and a positive variable of the global equation.

Nelson Mandela offered the South Africans a way forward as well when the whole world thought THAT was impossible.

The way forward is not to listen to Mousavi, who updates his Facebook statuses through various assistants and never goes to the frontlines before suggesting the young do the same, into the hands of a hyperparanoid government (with due justification for such - see Operation Ajax and the successive government overthrows since the discovery of oil in Iran)... a government with GUNS.

There are plenty of people who openly dissent against the government of Iran. They do so by applying the required etiquette and protocol inherent in our culture for 10,000+ years, by not using terms like "regime", by not committing overt acts that, again, make the government duly paranoid, and, thereby, affect change.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Khirad
01:13 PM on 12/16/2010
How can Mousavi go to the frontlines when security forces prevent him from doing so, unless you believe it is coordinated Kabuki theater? I mean, it's possible, but so is the fact that they cordon him off whenever a planned commemoration is about to happen.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
persianadvocate
06:44 PM on 12/13/2010
Look how the press tries to exploit literally ANYTHING Iran does, like try to function like a normal state. OF COURSE, the Nuclear Issue is the predicate foreign policy issue, it's not like Israel threatened Iran or anything: http://www.google.com/search?rls=en&q=%22israel+threatens+Iran%22&sourceid=opera&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8
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karim banned
A fool's mind is at the mercy of his tongue and a
08:24 PM on 12/13/2010
This winning the price of stupidity.

"Israel threatens Iran with tactical nukes on Fox News"

http://vodpod.com/watch/3031993-israel-threatens-iran-with-tactical-nukes-on-fox-news
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
persianadvocate
10:12 PM on 12/13/2010
lol it's like they're trying to be dumb...or actually are
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bergen2
06:43 PM on 12/13/2010
Some of the posters here sound like Iranian government (regime) propagandists.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
persianadvocate
06:45 PM on 12/13/2010
or otherwise are tired of recycled propaganda that was used against Mossadegh AND the Shah

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6kySR3fpa5s - 3 minutes long and opens your eyes quite wide
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karim banned
A fool's mind is at the mercy of his tongue and a
06:51 PM on 12/13/2010
It is amazing that even Shah of Iran had the courage to call the western media Zionist puppets.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bergen2
07:00 PM on 12/13/2010
That was interesting. Thanks for sharing.
07:57 PM on 12/13/2010
Bergen2 - - It is in the best interests of the American people that the US have an intelligent foreign policy in the Middle East. Thanks to the Israel lobby, there is no such thing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
persianadvocate
06:40 PM on 12/13/2010
Again, a really bad analysis by probably someone who hasn't stepped in Iran in 30 years.

If you think this guy was fired without the Supreme Leader's approval, you should rename yourself Sheeple #1029039304-e.
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Quinterius
Accept no dogmas
06:29 PM on 12/13/2010
Mottaki was a master of double-talk and was too low key. Salehi has a highly respected intellect and is a very fluent English speaker who can perhaps explain the nature of the Iranian nuclear program to paranoid Americans and Europeans. The current negotiations will not be affected since those negotiations are being conducted on behalf of Iran by Saeed Jalilee who is the Secretary of the Iranian Supreme National Security Council. These negotiations are not going anywhere since both Jalilee and Catherine Ashton who is representing the West are just spinning their wheels. It would be great if a meeting was set up between Hillary Clinton and Salehi. But, Obama would be crucified for "weakness" if he tried anything innovative. So, we'll probably see the current stalemate continue for sometime to come.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
streetmagik
You can't fight in here this is the war room!!
07:21 PM on 12/13/2010
If the Iranians had the slightest interest in explaining their program things would never have gotten to this point.

There are repeated IAEA reports attesting to the fact that Iran is not intent in clearing this up. That is because there are military dimensions to the program - and more Iran beleives they are entitled to develop the military dimensions but cannot come right out and say it.
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Quinterius
Accept no dogmas
08:20 PM on 12/13/2010
And, how did you come up with these brilliant conclusions. Have you read any of the reports? I suggest you read a critical analysis of the IAEA report on Iran from last February at:

http://www.campaigniran.org/casmii/index.php?q=node/9431

The US and its allies have been lying about Iran's nuclear program for years. But, because of poor public relations, Iran has not been able to point out these lies to the world press and community. Salehi could help clear some of the confusion.
07:49 PM on 12/14/2010
Your premise is silly. Prior to the last round of sanctions Iran brokered a deal with Brazil and Turkey for their nuclear fuel to be shipped and enriched in those countries yet we still shoved our absurd sanctions down their throats and rejected that deal despite Turkey and Brazil being allies. This is also completely disregarding the hypocrisy of the nuclear issue to begin with which is why should Israel be allowed to keep hundreds of nukes stored away and Iran not even be allowed to switch to nuclear energy. The fact is even the sheep here will eventually (hopefully) start to see the double standard we apply to the Middle East. We sanction Iran on baseless claims and go to war in Iraq on completely false pretenses and yet when Israel commits crimes recorded on film such as dropping a white phosphorus bomb on a hospital we veto and dismiss and criticism.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alimostofi
Astrologer, Commentator
05:30 PM on 12/13/2010
The authors do not present either the Iranians or the Islamic Republic appropriately. If reporters referred to the activities of the Ayatollahs' ministers as part of the "Islamic Republic", and the affairs of the Iranian people as part of "Iran", then the world would know who is who, and what is what. Of course some people like to think that the regime is Iranian, when it does not have the slightest interest in Iran. The Islamic regime has its own agenda. So please respect the Iranians and non-Iranians Messrs Murphy and Dareini.
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karim banned
A fool's mind is at the mercy of his tongue and a
05:47 PM on 12/13/2010
With your analogy US government is not American becasue it has interests of Israel at heart.

In the new world order governments do not have their people's interests at heart so the whole world is a political Twilight zone.

At least Iran goverment adhere to (pretend to adhere depending on your political view) some type of Islamic moral code but we do not see any sign of moral code in behaviour of western governments.

We have a saying in Persian who goes like this.

If there is a ruling to imprison the drunks, then they should arrest everybody becasue one way or other every politician in the world has his/her own agenda, normally against the interest of people, at heart.

Wasn't childhood a good time when we thought somebody (government) is looking after our interests?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
streetmagik
You can't fight in here this is the war room!!
07:26 PM on 12/13/2010
Moral code? What is that - torture, deceit, running a facist police state where civil rights are trampled on a regular basis? Closing down all manner of free speech. Hanging gays... or right there are no gays in Iran.

The fact that Iran is so preachy and holier then thou only makes their hypocrisy more apparent.
05:48 PM on 12/13/2010
Well said Ali.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alimostofi
Astrologer, Commentator
05:38 AM on 12/14/2010
Thanks. Slowly people will start to isolate the regime with words, not swords. Swords just feed the military.
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karim banned
A fool's mind is at the mercy of his tongue and a
05:24 PM on 12/13/2010
This is what so called moderate Iranians think.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t1uWCMdBOG8&feature=player_embedded#!

According to them US sanctions actually is hurting them and is not hurting Iran's goverment.

Make your own conclusion, but people like Mr. Dareini are not considered to be moderate, they are part of hardcore anti Islam movement which we are hear too much of in western media as opposition voice.
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karim banned
A fool's mind is at the mercy of his tongue and a
05:30 PM on 12/13/2010
The documentary is in English after the first 35 seconds.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Khirad
01:20 PM on 12/16/2010
I recommend you read Hooman's books, if you haven't.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
koroush1336
An human rights activist and totally anti-mullahs,
04:43 PM on 12/13/2010
This is a very clear sign. The mullahs' regime is at the edge of being overthrown. It is quite obvious that the mullahs have started to "eat" their own "meat"! We should see more of the same in the near future. This "chip" was one of khameini's which was forced by him into the Antari-Nejad's C.abinet. Now he -AN- is passing him out of his "system. The next move has to come from khameini. It wouldn't take a long time to see the next episode.
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Amryxx
politeness rules, but with sharpened edges
04:59 PM on 12/13/2010
"The mullahs' regime is at the edge of being overthrown"

I don't think one (someone getting sacked) implies the other.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
koroush1336
An human rights activist and totally anti-mullahs,
05:26 PM on 12/13/2010
On the contrary! What we see here, is a situation inwhich a dictatorship has come to a dead end. Not knowing what to do in order to keep the system on its broken feet, they need to solidify it. It is an on going feud between the mullahs' factions- even in the so-called hard-liners' faction. There is no solid stage where the mullahs could put their feet without being shaken to death. Sacking a cabinet member in a normal situation, is not gonna do much of worries. But the mullahs' regime is not in a normal situation. They are at war with the people in Iran. They are killing and suppressing just about every aspects of social life. They do all of these repressions, just to keep themselves from falling into the HISTORY'S GARBAGE CAN!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Richard Pearce
Atheistic-agnostic Canadian polymath
05:40 PM on 12/13/2010
You're arguing logic with someone who has no interest in logic, or reasoning, or thinking.
 
All Koroush needs is to be told 'Iran is a dictatorship' by the same people who said that Saddam was behind 9/11 and like one of those windup toys, he'll dutifully go off bashing out the message unfazed by such silly things as those.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bergen2
06:29 PM on 12/13/2010
Have thought that Khameini's power has been slowly diminished as Ahmadinejad and the RG have been consolidating their power. What options do you think Khameini has now? Didn't he make his son the head of the RG, (which seems to add another layer of complexity to the situation)?
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karim banned
A fool's mind is at the mercy of his tongue and a
06:41 PM on 12/13/2010
At least try to learn what different entities in Iran called.

RG was part of Iraq special force.

Iran does not have a RG.

Look into the link for more info.

http://www.iranmilitaryforum.net/index.php?topic=6798.msg58986;topicseen#msg58986
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
koroush1336
An human rights activist and totally anti-mullahs,
04:28 PM on 12/14/2010
Bergen2:
mullah khameini is getting weaker and weaker on daily bases. It was few weeks ago that he went to Qum (the mullahs HQ!) in order to rally support for his son. He was really slime. He had to go there three times and every time, he was less recieved! In another occassion, Mashaeei, antari-nejad's assistance had said: ...it is not so obvious that in the next round, we will have a "valayet faghih" (the suprem leader)! He was talking about his or antari-nejad's 3rd term!

In the recent up risings against the mullahs' regime, khameini's son was in charge of the killings of the demonstrators, as a practice for his "term". And the people were saying in their slogans: "Mojtaba, Mojtaba bemiri, Saltanat ra nabini!" Which means: Mojtaba (khamenei's son), you will die. You will not see the kingdom!

So if we want to have a picture of the situation and what will happen next, I would say that the GAP between the mullahs' factions get deeper and deeper. At the end most likely both of them (antari-nejad & khamenei) will be eliminated.