Who's in Charge of Iran's Foreign Policy?
20 December 2010By Tariq Alhomayed
Acting Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi made
a nice statement about the necessity of Iran improving
its relations with Saudi Arabia, saying "Saudi Arabia
deserves to have special political ties with Iran.
Iran and Saudi Arabia, as two effective countries in
the Islamic world, can resolve many problems
together."
However an important question needs to be answered
before observers can be certain that what Salehi is
saying is true and not a new political ploy by Tehran
that aims to neutralize Saudi Arabia in the coming
period. This is particularly important as this comes
after the [leaked] US cables revealed that the
Iranians are well aware of Riyadh's position towards
their nuclear ambitions – and this is not through
[Tehran] reading the US diplomatic cables that were
leaked by WikiLeaks – but rather due to what the
highest authority in Saudi Arabia told the Iranians
during a face-to-face meeting. It has been revealed
that the Saudi monarch King Abdullah Bin Abdulaziz
told the Iranians that they have no business meddling
in Arab matters. It was also revealed that King
Abdullah Bin Abdulaziz gave the Iranians an
opportunity to improve mutual relations, however
Tehran did nothing in this regard, even after King
Abdullah improved his relations with Iran's [Ayatollah
Akbar Hashemi] Rafsanjani and [former president
Mohammad] Khatami.
So the question that we must ask here is: who is in
charge of Iran's foreign policy? Is it the Supreme
Leader, the Iranian President, or the Foreign
Minister? According to Iranian Foreign Ministry
spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast, Iran's major [foreign]
policies have a pre-defined framework and
principles…and the Foreign Ministry is the only
[state] organ that is tasked to implement these."
Anybody reading Salehi's statement about the necessity
of improving relations with Saudi Arabia, due to
Riyadh's Islamic, political, and international
position, might view this as a formal Iranian
acknowledgement that Tehran's foreign policy towards
Riyadh in the past was both incorrect and a failure
and that Tehran is therefore trying to repair this
relationship today. However does this mean that
Mottaki was stronger than the Supreme Leader and the
Iranian President, in being able to enforce this
foreign policy since 2005 whilst they were unable to
do anything about it? This is not believable or indeed
even conceivable. For what power did Manouchehr
Mottaki possess, especially as he was not in charge of
any armed forces or militia, and the humiliating
manner in which he was removed from office only serves
to prove that he did not possess any such strength.
Of course we hope that Iran's relations with
everybody, not just Saudi Arabia, are good and stable,
however politics is more than words, for these must be
followed by action. This will continue to be Iran's
major problem with all the countries in our region,
not just Saudi Arabia, regardless of what embellished
diplomatic rhetoric they use, particularly as we have
begun to notice today that a more open language is
being used publicly by regional states – and Saudi
Arabia – towards Iran. This is because we are living
in a post-WikiLeaks world. The Iranians should be
afraid, and this is for one simple reason, which is
that we have not seen any Arab anger or criticism –
whether publicly or in the media – towards what
WikiLeaks revealed some regional states said about
Iran. This is something that the Iranians must pay
attention to!
©
EsinIslam.Com
Add Comments