Google – AFP, 28 Sep 2013
![]() |
Iranian
president Hassan Rouhani waves to supporters as his motorcade draws
out of
Tehran's Mehrabad Airport upon his arrival from New York, on September 28,
2013
(AFP, Arra Kenare)
|
New York —
With a blitz of composed speeches and a media campaign showcasing his every
move, Iran's new president succeeded phenomenally in one week in changing the
dynamics for a country that had sunk into near pariah status.
The
self-styled moderate, tasked with easing concerns over Iran's nuclear program,
made history by speaking to US President Barack Obama in the first contact
between the countries' leaders since the 1979 Islamic revolution.
Hassan
Rouhani stole the show at the annual UN General Assembly summit, addressing
nearly a dozen packed audiences or interviews in which he calmly, and with a
smile, explained how he wanted better relations with the West.
A Twitter
account in English tracked Rouhani's movements from a shot of him serenely
sitting in a car Monday on his way in from the airport, to a shot of the
white-turbaned cleric grinning broadly Friday as he boarded his plane home.
The shift
could not be more stark from his predecessor Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who was also
fond of appearances overseas but was greeted with walkouts, protesters and
diplomatic rebukes for his bombastic defense of Iran's nuclear program and his
denial of the Holocaust.
Rouhani,
who understands English but almost exclusively spoke Farsi in public, condemned
the Holocaust in the face of repeated questions, while also diligently
criticizing Israel.
Critics,
notably Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, accused Rouhani of offering
little different from Ahmadinejad other than a more elegant delivery, and
charge that Iran is seeking nuclear weapons.
But most
foreign leaders who met Rouhani said they were impressed, or at least hopeful,
that he can find a peaceful resolution to a row that until recently had prompted
talk of a US or Israeli attack.
"My
frank impression of President Rouhani was that he is willing to fully cooperate
with the international community," said Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of
Japan, which historically has had cordial relations with Iran.
![]() |
Iranian
president Hassan Rouhani (C) and
Eshaq Jahangiri, the First Vice President (L)
arrive at Tehran's Mehrabad Airport, on
September 28, 2013 (AFP, Atta Kenare)
|
"There
is a very, very sharp change in attitude from the Iranians. That's something
positive. Now we need to see how to translate that into facts," Fabius
said.
In a
telephone call that would have been unthinkable weeks ago, Rouhani spoke for 15
minutes by telephone with Obama, who signed off by telling him goodbye --
"khodahafez" -- in Farsi.
Obama
reached out to Iran after entering the White House in 2009, but said he was
disappointed by the lack of reciprocation.
After
appeals from Israel and US lawmakers, the Obama administration spearheaded
tough sanctions on Iran's oil and banking sectors. The measures have wreaked
havoc on Iran's economy, and the Tehran leadership eagerly want them lifted.
Alireza
Nader, senior international policy analyst at the Rand Corp., said that
Rouhani, who studied in Scotland, and his US-educated Foreign Minister Mohammad
Javad Zarif knew how to relate to the West.
"He
gets it. He gets what the US is concerned about and he knows how to put on the
charm," Nader said of Rouhani.
![]() |
US
President Barack Obama talks with
President Hassan Rouhani of Iran during
a
phone call in the Oval Office on
September 27, 2013 (The White House
/AFP/File,
Pete Souza)
|
While
warning that diplomacy may prove difficult, Nader said that Rouhani's UN
performance -- and talks with Obama -- showed that he enjoyed the backing of
Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Mark
Dubowitz, executive director of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a US
group which advocates a hard line on Iran, agreed that Rouhani had shored up
support in Tehran but said he saw little substantively different from
Ahmadinejad.
"From
Rouhani's perspective, his week was a smashing success and Rouhani-phoria is
now at a feverish pitch," he said.
But he
predicted the buzz would fade, and noted that Netanyahu -- who has branded
Rouhani a "wolf in sheep's clothing" -- will meet Obama at the White
House on Monday.
"Everybody
has to get away from the euphoria of personality and to the more mundane task
of nuclear physics," Dubowitz said.
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