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| Iran's President Hassan Rouhani speaks during a joint press conference with Austria's Chancellor Sebastian Kurz on July 4, 2018 in Vienna (AFP Photo/ALEX HALADA) |
Tehran (AFP) - Frequently a target of attack by hardliners, Iran's President Hassan Rouhani is benefiting from a sudden surge in support from his former critics, a week after he called for national unity.
The
apparent sea-change in conservative rhetoric follows hawkish comments by the
president himself following Washington's unilateral May withdrawal from a
landmark 2015 nuclear deal.
Visiting
Europe to seek economic guarantees, Rouhani lashed out at Israel in the Swiss
capital Bern on Tuesday, saying Iran "sees the Zionist regime as an
illegitimate regime".
And he has
questioned the American government's ability to make good on threats to prevent
other countries buying Tehran's oil.
The latest
evidence of the domestic shift came on Wednesday, in a letter by prominent
General Qassem Soleimani to the moderately conservative president.
Soleimani
-- head of the elite Revolutionary Guards' foreign operations -- thanks the
president for his "wise and appropriate" words on Israel and the US,
in the letter published by Fars news agency.
Rouhani's
remarks were "a source of pride", wrote the general.
'Meeting
in the Strait'
Rouhani is
the main Iranian architect of the July 2015 nuclear accord with world powers,
under which his country agreed to rein in its nuclear programme in exchange for
easing multilateral sanctions which had strangled the economy.
Some
Iranians have interpreted Rouhani's recent hawkish comments as meaning he could
be open to blocking the Strait of Hormuz -- a threat Tehran has brandished
during past bouts of regional tension.
Some 30
percent of all the world's sea-borne oil exports pass through the strait, which
runs from the Gulf into the Indian Ocean.
Conservative
Iranian media outlets have thrown their weight behind Rouhani.
"Meeting
in the Strait" read a headline in Javan -- a daily close to the
Revolutionary Guards -- along with a picture of the president and General
Soleimani shaking hands in front of a map of the Strait of Hormuz.
A photo of
Soleimani was splashed across the front page of Sazandegi newspaper with the
headline "Unity Sepah-Government" (Sepah is the Farsi acronym for the
Revolutionary Guards).
Rouhani,
who has sought to open up various economic sectors to private enterprise, has
repeatedly criticised the Revolutionary Guards for exerting too tight a grip on
Iran's economy.
Since he
first took office in 2013, Rouhani has regularly been attacked by
ultra-conservatives.
He was
elected for a second four-year term in May 2017, with the support of reformers.
After
protests around the New Year in many Iranian cities against economic hardship,
they accused Rouhani of abandoning the country's weakest citizens.
Some have
held up America's withdrawal from the nuclear agreement as proof of the
president's naivety in trusting the West.
'Survival
of the nation'
As Iran's
rial plunged in value and protests re-ignited, some legislators called in late
June for Rouhani to be impeached.
But things
changed abruptly after June 27 when he appealed to his opponents for help.
Kayhan is
another ultra-conservative newspaper now backing the president.
"We
must put to one side our differences because, at present, the national interest
and the survival of the nation are at stake," said an editorial.
But Javan
signalled the truce may only be temporary.
"Resisting
the enemy and preserving the nation's independence require us to be together
and put our differences to one side until a later date", wrote
editor-in-chief Abdollah Ganji.

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