Iran’s Khamenei derides US Senators, calls Netanyahu ‘Zionist clown’

As the US negotiates with Iran over its nuclear program, Iran’s supreme leader continues to ridicule American and Israeli decision makers. 

By: Reuters and World Israel News Staff

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s Supreme Leader, derided on Thursday the letter authored by US senators threatening to undo any nuclear deal between Washington and Tehran, saying he was worried because the United States was known for “backstabbing,” Mehr news agency reported.

Abdullah and Obama

US President Obama (L) with Saudi King Abdullah. (Photo: Act for America)

A group of 47 Republican senators co-signed and sent an open letter to the Iranian regime clarifying that any deal signed by the Obama administration regarding Iran’s nuclear program will be worthless as soon as President Barack Obama leaves the Oval Office

Khamenei, the ultimate authority on all Iranian matters of state, added at a meeting with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and senior clerics that whenever negotiators made progress, the Americans became “harsher, tougher and coarser”.

The White House itself has described the letter as “reckless” and “irresponsible,” saying it interfered with efforts by six major powers to negotiate with Iran on a deal to prevent it from building a nuclear bomb.

Mehr quoted Khamenei as saying: “Of course I am worried, because the other side is known for opacity, deceit and backstabbing. Every time we reach a stage where the end of the negotiations is in sight, the tone of the other side, specifically the Americans, becomes harsher, coarser and tougher. This is the nature of their tricks and deceptions.”

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The clerical Supreme Leader said the letter was “a sign of the decay of political ethics in the American system”, and he described as risible long-standing US accusations of Iranian involvement in terrorism.

US Secretary of State John Kerry, Washington’s chief nuclear negotiator, voiced “utter disbelief” at the senators’ action, saying the notion that they could alter any executive accord between government leaders was “flat wrong”.

Khamenei – Conservative Hardliner

Khamenei has long been a conservative hardliner wary of any detente with the West but has backed the diplomacy pursued by Rouhani, who was elected by a landslide in 2013, promising steps to end Iran’s economically crippling international isolation.

At the same time, Khamenei has not stopped speeches embellished with denunciations of the United States to reassure powerful hardliners in the clergy and security services, for whom anti-US sentiment has been central to Iran’s Islamic Revolution.

The nuclear negotiations, which resume in Lausanne, Switzerland, next week, are at a critical juncture as the sides try to meet an end of March target for an outline accord, with June 30 the deadline for a detailed, final agreement.

Iran and the powers have twice extended their deadline to conclude the negotiations, which aim to place curbs on Iran’s nuclear energy capacity to help ensure it cannot develop nuclear bombs. In return, Iran would secure a removal of sanctions that have severely damaged Iran’s oil-based economy.

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The Islamic Republic dismisses Western suspicions that it aims to develop nuclear weapons, claiming its atomic energy program is only for peaceful purposes.

Khamenei: Netanyahu’s a ‘Zionist Clown’

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addresses a joint meeting of Congress on March 03, 2015. (Amos Ben Gershom/ GPO)

Khamenei also criticized a March 3 speech to Congress by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tehran’s nuclear program, describing it as remarks “by a Zionist clown”.

In the speech, Netanyahu warned Washington that it was negotiating a bad deal with Iran that could spark a “nuclear nightmare”.

Israel regards Iran’s nuclear agenda as a threat and is dismissive of the talks, suggesting Tehran is only trying to buy time to become a threshold nuclear power.

Khamenei also repeated a call for Iran’s economy to diversify away from oil revenues to reduce the effectiveness of international sanctions isolating the oil sector. “If the country and economy were not dependent on oil revenues… could the enemy harm us with sanctions?” he said.

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