25 Apr 2024
Iranian president elect inauguration to be held on 4 August; United States and Israel are not welcome, announces official spokesman, Ayatollah Khamenei says Washington 'not trustworthy'
The Iranian foreign ministry spokesman announced Tuesday that the inauguration ceremony for president elect Hassan Rowhani will be held on 4 August in the Parliament.

An invitation is directed to all countries except for the United States and of course the Zionist entity which Iran does not recognize, said the spokesman referring to Israel, Al-Ahram Arabic news website reported.

Many countries have been welcomed to the ceremony. The list of countries participating in the inauguration will be announced shortly, added the official spokesman.

The statement comes after Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei warned Sunday that Washington was "not trustworthy," after former US officials and lawmakers urged diplomacy with the Islamic republic's incoming president Hassan Rowhani, reported AFP.

"I said at the beginning of the (Iranian) year that I am not optimistic about negotiations with the US, though in the past years I did not forbid negotiating (with them) about certain issues like Iraq," he told top officials.

Khamenei said in March he was "not optimistic" over the prospects of direct talks with Tehran's arch foe on the sidelines of its nuclear negotiations with major powers.

"The Americans are ... not trustworthy and they are not honest in their encounters... The stance of American officials over past months once again confirms that one should not be optimistic," he said at iftar, the meal breaking the fast during the month of Ramadan, attended by centrist cleric Rowhani and outgoing President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

The comments from Khamenei, who has the final say in the regime's macro policy issues, came less than a week after former US officials and dozens of American lawmakers called for President Barack Obama to pursue diplomacy with Rowhani.

In a letter to Obama, the ex-policymakers said the election of Rowhani "presents a major potential opportunity."

"We strongly encourage your administration to seize the moment to pursue new multilateral and bilateral negotiations with Iran once Rowhani takes office and to avoid any provocative action that could narrow the window of opportunity for a more moderate policy out of Tehran," they wrote.

"In interacting with the world it's a skill to continue on your path without the other side being able to prevent you. If not you have lost," Ayatollah Khamenei added, alluding to Iran's future nuclear talks with world powers after Rowhani, who once served as his country's top nuclear negotiator, takes over from Ahmadinejad.

Rowhani who won a June presidential election has since vowed to engage constructively with the international community and to ease tensions raised by Tehran's nuclear ambitions.

"Moderation in foreign policy means neither surrender nor confrontation but constructive and efficacious interaction with the world," Rowhani has said.

Obama at the start of his first term in office in 2009 offered talks with Iran, which has not had relations with the United States since its 1979 Islamic revolution which overthrew the pro-Western shah.

The United States has led a drive to cut off Iran's oil exports, its key source of revenues, as a way to pressure the regime over its controversial nuclear work.

Western powers and Israel believe the nuclear programme is being used to develop an atomic bomb, although Iran insists it is solely for peaceful purposes.

By Ahram Online

 

The Iran Project is not responsible for the content of quoted articles.
https://theiranproject.com/vdcaawny.49n6i1gtk4.html
Your Name
Your Email Address