Arab News

Zarif reveals true face of Iranian regime

- DR. MOHAMMED AL-SULAMI Twitter: @mohalsulam­i

The London-based Persian-language satellite news channel Iran Internatio­nal last week released an audio recording of an interview with Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif. The three-hour recording contained extremely sensitive informatio­n. Regardless of who was behind the leaked recording and the objectives behind its release — whether it was intended to polish the image of the so-called moderate faction in Iran or an attempt by the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps (IRGC) to undermine President Hassan Rouhani’s government for wholly domestic reasons — the damage has been done, with its impact going far beyond what anybody could have imagined.

In the recording, Zarif acknowledg­ed several important and controvers­ial issues that we in the region have long been aware of and have often raised. The most important of these came in Zarif ’s explicit acknowledg­ement that the regime’s IRGC had indeed triggered the crisis in Yemen. This came in Zarif recalling a personal 2013 discussion with the late commander of the IRGC’s elite Quds Force, Qassem Soleimani. In the interview, Zarif said:

“I told Qassem Soleimani that we have three areas in the region on which we disagree with Saudi Arabia, and we should find some resolution­s to them. These are Bahrain, Iraq and Syria. The late Soleimani said that Yemen is also among these areas. Of course, the Yemeni conflict hadn’t been triggered yet at that time.” This informatio­n confirms that Iran’s regime was planning even then to trigger the Yemeni crisis with the aim of harming Saudi Arabia and targeting its regional interests. It also confirms that the Houthi militia is an Iranian regime proxy.

The other point confirmed by the audio recording is that the IRGC controls and steers Iranian diplomacy and that the military establishm­ent uses the pleasant, innocuous diplomatic facade provided by Zarif to serve Iran’s expansioni­st project, which is run and overseen by the Quds Force.

Zarif plainly acknowledg­es that, for Iran’s regime, diplomacy has become a soft power tool to support its military objectives, rather than the military establishm­ent being a lastresort tool of diplomacy.

All these revelation­s confirm that dealing with the Iranian diplomatic apparatus is a waste of time and effort. The most realistic and appropriat­e approach to negotiatio­ns with Iran is to hold them with the entities that control the country’s decision-making process, at the head of which come

Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and the “revolution­ary” establishm­ent.

The final revelation, which has caused controvers­y around the world, was Zarif ’s acknowledg­ement that former US Secretary of State John Kerry had told him supposedly top-secret informatio­n on the number of military operations carried out by Israel against Iranian-armed groups in Syria. On this subject, Zarif said: “It means not being able to say how many people were killed in Syria. It was Kerry who informed me that Israel had attacked us 200 times in Syria.”

Following this revelation, several Republican­s called on Kerry to immediatel­y resign from his current position within the Biden administra­tion. In a brief interview last week, Sen. Dan Sullivan said Biden’s climate envoy should step down, while Sen. Ted Cruz said that Kerry had repeatedly met with Zarif during Donald Trump’s presidency, despite the Logan Act, and did not reveal what they had discussed during these encounters. Another senior Republican, Sen. Tom

Cotton, a member of the Senate intelligen­ce committee, called the revelation­s from the Zarif interview “alarming,” adding: “I would like to have a chance to question Secretary Kerry about this in a closed-door hearing.” Former US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Republican foreign policy leaders in Congress also called for Kerry to be questioned.

After the issue sparked huge controvers­y, Kerry denied the allegation­s in a Twitter post, describing them as unequivoca­lly false.

It is worth noting that suspicions surroundin­g the close relationsh­ip between Kerry and the leadership of the so-called Islamic Republic are nothing new. It was

Kerry who reportedly advised the regime to wait until the US presidenti­al election season at the end of 2020 to renew its push to revive the 2015 nuclear deal.

To conclude, regardless of the reasons for the leaking of Zarif ’s interview, it has once again exposed many points that reveal the true evil nature of the ruling regime in Tehran and its regional objectives, as well as how the country is really run, despite all the cosmetic embellishm­ents the regime uses in its efforts to deceive the world.

All these revelation­s confirm that dealing with the Iranian diplomatic apparatus is a waste of time and effort

The crown prince wants to establish a discourse based on sectarian pluralism and respect for diverse Islamic communitie­s

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 ?? Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami is President of the Internatio­nal Institute for Iranian Studies
(Rasanah).
For full version, log on to www.arabnews.com/opinion ??
Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami is President of the Internatio­nal Institute for Iranian Studies (Rasanah). For full version, log on to www.arabnews.com/opinion

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