




Just one month after the UN Security Council imposed sanctions on Iran to curb its nuclear programme, two hard-line newspapers, including the one owned by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, called on the president to stay out of all nuclear matters.
Such a public rebuke was seen as a sign that the supreme leader—who has final say on all matters of state—might no longer support the president as the public face of defiance to the West.
It is the first sign that Ahmadinejad has lost Ayatollah Khamenei’s confidence, a potentially damaging development for a president who has rallied his nation and defined his administration by declaring nuclear power as Iran’s “inalienable right.”
The presidency is a relatively weak position with no official authority over foreign policy, the domain of the supreme leader. However, Ahmadinejad has used his post as a bully pulpit to insert himself into the nuclear debate, and as long as he appeared to enjoy Ayatollah Khamenei’s support, he could continue.
The Security Council passed a resolution on December 23, with sanctions intended to curb Iran’s uranium enrichment programme, which Iran says is for peaceful purposes but the United States and some European nations contend is for the purpose of creating nuclear weapons. The measure bars the trade of goods or technology related to Iran’s nuclear programme. Enriched uranium can be used for making nuclear fuel but also for making nuclear weapons.
Meanwhile, the president has dismissed the Security Council’s resolution as “a piece of torn paper.”
The daily Jomhouri-Eslami, which reflects the views of Ayatollah Khamenei, said, “The resolution is certainly harmful for the country,” adding that it was “too much to call it ‘a piece of torn paper.’ “
The newspaper added that the nuclear programme required its own diplomacy.
Another newspaper Shargh—run by an aide to the country’s chief nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani—also pressed Ahmadinejad to end his involvement in the nuclear programme.
“They want to minimise the consequences of sanctions now that they have been imposed,” said Mohammad Atrianfar, an executive of the Shargh. “But they don’t have clear strategy, and they are taking one step at a time.”
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