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Mohammad Javad Zarif: Iran's foreign policy 'poisoned by infighting' Iranian president backs foreign minister Zarif following surprise resignation
(about 4 hours later)
Mohammad Javad Zarif has said Iran's diplomacy is being "poisoned" by party and factional fighting, a day after he offered to resign as foreign minister. The Iranian president's chief of staff has indicated that he may refuse to accept the resignation of the country's foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif.
He made the comments in a newspaper interview that took place before he announced he was stepping down, apologising for all his "shortcomings". Hassan Rouhani was "satisfied" with Mr Zarif's record and considered him the only man for the job, the aide said.
Hardliners in Iran have long criticised Mr Zarif over his role in negotiating a nuclear deal with world powers in 2015. Mr Zarif said he was stepping down on Monday, after warning that infighting was poisoning Iran's diplomacy.
President Hassan Rouhani has yet to formally accept his resignation. His role negotiating the landmark 2015 nuclear deal with world powers exposed him to sharp criticism from hardliners.
Mr Rouhani made no mention of Mr Zarif's announcement in a televised speech on Tuesday morning, but he did praise him for his "resistance" and "capabilities". Many hardliners opposed the decision to accept limits on the country's nuclear activities in return for the lifting of crippling sanctions.
"If our foreign ministry is doing something, it is because it is from the people and it represents the people," the president added. "The government, in general, is elected by the people." Pressure on Mr Zarif grew last year after President Donald Trump abandoned the deal and reinstated US sanctions targeting Iran's oil and banking sectors.
Mr Rouhani also noted that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad had "explicitly thanked" the Iranian foreign ministry for its help during the country's civil war. Why did Mr Zarif offer to resign?
Earlier, a majority of MPs signed a letter to the president on Tuesday asking for Mr Zarif to remain in post, a spokesman for parliament's National Security and Foreign Policy told the official Irna news agency. Mr Zarif initially gave no explanation. "I would like to sincerely apologise for not being able to continue my service and for all my shortcomings during my service," he wrote on Instagram.
Mr Zarif announced his resignation on Monday night in an Instagram post that gave no explanation for the decision. On Tuesday morning, he urged fellow diplomats not to follow his lead and suggested that he had resigned because he felt he had been sidelined.
"I apologise for not being able to continue in the post and for all the shortcomings and flaws in the period," he wrote. "I hope my resignation will act as a spur for the foreign ministry to regain its proper statutory role in the conduct of foreign affairs," he said.
He was quoted by the centrist newspaper Jomhuri Eslami as saying in an interview that political infighting was hampering the foreign ministry's work.
"The deadly poison for foreign policy is for foreign policy to become an issue of party and factional fighting," he said.
Minister 'left with no credibility'
By Kasra Naji, BBC Persian
Mr Zarif's exclusion from top-level meetings in Tehran on Monday during the previously unannounced visit of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad was the final straw.
When photos were released showing of Mr Assad attending talks with President Hassan Rouhani and Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Mr Zarif saw them as a new low for his ministry's role in overseeing Iran's foreign policy.
He wrote in message to a reporter for a reformist newspaper that that the pictures had left him with "no credibility in the world as Iran's foreign minister".
The fact is that Iranian hardliners resent him for agreeing to dismantle much of the country's nuclear programme. Those around the supreme leader have gradually wrested more and more of control of Iran's foreign policy from him, particularly in relation to Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Syria, Yemen and Lebanon.
Mr Zarif, most observers agree, has put up a robust defence of Iran on the world stage in spite of the fact that many of Iran's positions, actions and behaviours - with which he has had little to do - have been indefensible.
What has the president said?
In a speech on Tuesday, Mr Rouhani made no mention of Mr Zarif's resignation, but he did praise the former foreign minister for his "resistance" and "capabilities".
"If our foreign ministry is doing something, it is because it is from the people and it represents the people," Mr Rouhani said.
The president also noted that his Syrian counterpart had "explicitly thanked" the Iranian foreign ministry for its help during the country's civil war.
Later, Mr Rouhani's chief-of-staff, Mahmoud Vaezi, wrote on Instagram: "The words of the president today in praising his foreign minister are a clear sign of the satisfaction of the representative of the people of Iran about the wise and effective positions and work of Dr Zarif and a tough response to some biased and incorrect analyses."
"In the view of Dr Rouhani, the Islamic Republic of Iran has only one foreign policy and one foreign minister," he added.
A majority of MPs meanwhile signed a letter asking the president to keep Mr Zarif in post, a spokesman for parliament's National Security and Foreign Policy said.
What has been the international reaction?
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo expressed scepticism about Mr Zarif's announcement, and dismissed both him and Mr Rouhani as "front men for a corrupt religious mafia".
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has accused Iran of lying about its nuclear activities, said: "Zarif has gone. Good riddance. As long as I am here, Iran will not have nuclear weapons."