Ayatollah Khamenei Accuses WH of ‘Lying,’ Being ‘Deceptive,’ and Having ‘Devilish’ Intentions
5:42 PM, Apr 9, 2015BY THOMAS JOSCELYN
President
Obama has long known that the real decision maker in Iran is Ayatollah
Khamenei, the so-called supreme leader. While other Iranian officials
have negotiated with Western powers over the mullahs’ nuclear program,
Khamenei’s opinion is the only one that really counts. It is for this
reason that Obama began writing directly to Khamenei early in his
presidency.
Earlier
today, Khamenei broke his silence on the supposed “framework” the Obama
administration has been trumpeting as the basis for a nuclear accord.
Khamenei’s speech pulled the rug out from underneath the
administration.
Khamenei
accused the Obama administration of “lying” about the proposed terms,
being “deceptive,” and having “devilish” intentions, according to multiple published accounts of his speech, as well as posts on his official Twitter feed.
Khamenei
also disputed the key terms Obama administration officials have said
were agreed upon in principle. Economic sanctions will not be phased out
once Iran’s compliance has been “verified,”
according to the Ayatollah. Instead, Khamenei said that if the U.S.
wants a deal, then all sanctions must be dropped as soon as the
agreement is finalized. Khamenei also put strict limits on the reach of
the inspectors who would be tasked with this verification process in the
first place.
Beginning
earlier this month and in the days since, Obama and his advisers have
attempted to portray the negotiations as major step forward. During an
appearance in the Rose Garden on April 2, Obama said the U.S. and its
allies have “reached a historic understanding with Iran.”
Khamenei does not agree. “There was no need to take a position” on the supposed deal before today, Khamenei said.
“The officials are saying that nothing has been done yet and nothing is
obligatory. I neither agree nor disagree [with any deal].”
“What
has been done so far does not guarantee an agreement, nor its contents,
nor even that the negotiations will continue to the end,”
Khamenei elaborated.
“I
neither support nor oppose it,” Khamenei reportedly said of the
proposed deal. “Everything is in the details; it may be that the
deceptive other side wants to restrict us in the details.”
It gets much worse.
When
Obama announced that a “framework” for the deal was in place earlier
this month, the administration released a fact sheet purportedly showing
the agreed upon “parameters.” The White House said the terms outlined
in the fact sheet “reflect the significant progress that has been made
in discussions between the P5+1, the European Union, and Iran.”
Khamenei would beg to differ.
“The
White House put out a statement just a few hours after our negotiators
finished their talks…this statement, which they called a ‘fact sheet’,
was wrong on most of the issues,” Khamenei said, according to Reuters. Khamenei added that the fact sheet, which doesn’t match Iran’s understanding, exposes America’s “devilish” intentions.
Khamenei’s
social media team emphasized many of these points on his official
Twitter feed, which published quotes from his speech. One tweet reads: “It’s all about the details. The disloyal side may want to stab #Iran in the back over the details; It is too early to congratulate. #IranTalks.”
The second tweet reads: “What’s been done so far secures neither the main deal nor its contents nor is it even clear whether #talks will bear fruit & lead to a deal.”
In
a third tweet, the Ayatollah calls into question the Obama
administration’s integrity. The fact sheet was supposedly an example of
the White House’s “lying.” Khamenei’s Twitter feed contains this post:
“I trust our negotiators but I’m really worried as the other side is
into lying & breaching promises; an example was White House fact
sheet.”
A fourth tweet reiterates the point: “Hours after the #talks, Americans offered a fact sheet that most of it was contrary to what was agreed. They always deceive & breach promises.”
During his
speech on April 2, Obama said that sanctions “relief will be phased as
Iran takes steps to adhere to the deal. If Iran violates the deal,
sanctions can be snapped back into place.” Other “American sanctions on
Iran for its support of terrorism, its human rights abuses, its
ballistic missile program, will continue to be fully enforced.”
Khamenei is having none of it.
The supreme leader said that sanctions “should be lifted all together on the same day of the agreement, not six months or one year later.” Rhetorically, he asked: “If lifting of sanctions is supposed to be connected to a process, then why do we negotiate?”
Again, Khamenei’s Twitter feed emphasized the point: “All #sanctions should be removed just when the deal is reached. If sanctions removal depends on another process then why we started to talk?”
Similarly,
Iranian president Hassan Rouhani said today that the sanctions should
be lifted on the “first day” the deal is implemented.
The
gap between the administration’s rhetoric on sanctions relief and the
Iranian position is hardly surprising. Even before the administration
announced the supposed framework for a deal earlier this month, Khamenei
made it clear that all sanctions needed to be ended at the beginning of
any deal.
During
a speech on March 23, Khamenei said the phased approach to ending the
sanctions was American “trickery.” Khamenei explained: “That is
unacceptable because the lifting of the sanctions is part of the
negotiations and not the result of the talks. Therefore, as the esteemed
president [Rouhani] made clear, the sanctions should be lifted
immediately after an agreement is reached.”
In his talk today, Khamenei also drew limits on the inspectors’ hypothetical reach inside Iran. “No unconventional inspection that’d place Iran under special monitoring is acceptable. Foreign monitoring on #Iran’s security isn’t allowed,” his social media team quoted him as saying.
Khamenei drew
red lines around Iran’s military sites, which are at the heart of the
dispute over the regime’s nuclear work. “The country’s military
officials are not permitted at all to allow the foreigners to cross
these boundaries…or [to] stop the country’s defensive development under
the pretext of supervision and inspection,” Khamenei said.
Obama
administration officials, including the president, have said that they
had work to do to conclude a deal. But Obama himself presented the
“framework” as a “historic understanding” between the two sides.
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