Four of the envoys, the ambassadors to London, Paris, Berlin and the representative to the United Nations in Geneva, were involved in months of delicate mediation between Iran and Europe over Tehran’s nuclear programme.
[ . . . ] One of the most prominent victims of the diplomatic cull is Mohammad Hossein Adeli, the urbane, American-educated Ambassador to London, who has served only for 12 months and is the first Iranian envoy since the Islamic Revolution who speaks fluent English. Mr Adeli, 52, will be leaving the foreign service in the coming weeks, along with the Iranian envoys to Paris, Berlin, Geneva and Kuala Lumpur. Iran’s ambassadors to Indonesia, Kazakhstan and several Arab states are also believed to be on the hitlist.
“We are expecting Iran to recall more than 20 ambassadors and heads of mission,” a Western diplomat in Tehran told The Times. “Obviously the new Government wants to have its own people and many of these ambassadors were supporters of (the former President) Rafsanjani and were pro-reform.”
Whatever the domestic political reasons behind the dismissals, it could not come at a worse time for Iran’s standing abroad. Last week the international community reacted with outrage when Mr Ahmadinejad called for Israel to be “wiped off the map”. Several of the ambassadors being recalled had to deal with the fallout from the remarks when they were summoned to receive protests from host governments.
[Among those fired is] Mohammad Reza al-Borzi, Iran’s envoy to the UN in Geneva, who has been a key intermediary with Britain, France and Germany over the nuclear issue.
[ . . . ] It is clear that a very different type of diplomat is likely to emerge from the shake-up. For instance, Mounacher Mottaki, the new Foreign Minister, is a former Ambassador to Japan and Turkey who was expelled from Ankara after being accused of supporting attacks against Iranian dissidents. He is a close ally of Ali Lari-jani, the powerful, hardline new secretary of the Supreme National Security Council, in charge of Iran’s nuclear negotiations and policy on Iraq.
But the hardening of Iranian policy is not going unchallenged at home. Mr Ahmadinejad may have won a landslide victory but he still has powerful opponents. Mohammad Khatami and Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, two former reformist presidents, are openly critical of his policies. On Sunday, Mr Khatami accused the new leader of “using fascist values and principles in the name of Islam to criticise liberalism”. Mohammad Atrianfar, a close Rafsanjani ally, yesterday called the sackings a big diplomatic mistake. “The President does not understand that he should proceed with caution,” he said.
Iranian Diplomats Purged
By Marc Schulman, American Future
Perhaps President Ahmadinejad is really a CIA agent. He’s doing everything he can to isolate Iran and undermine its position vis-a-vis the IAEA. Nice job, Mahmoud!
This is from The Times:
Posted by Marc Schulman at November 1, 2005 09:34 PM