Who’s afraid of American-Iranian reconciliation?

Who’s afraid of American-Iranian reconciliation? | The Times of Israel.

Obama’s approach to Iran is ‘naive,’ writes Arab columnist, as dailies focus on ‘historic’ Obama-Rouhani conversation

September 29, 2013, 3:16 pm
In this Sept. 10, 2013 photo released by the official website of the office of the Iranian Presidency, Iranian President Hasan Rouhani speaks during an interview with state television at the presidency in Tehran, Iran. (Photo credit: AP/Presidency Office, Rouzbeh Jadidoleslam)

In this Sept. 10, 2013 photo released by the official website of the office of the Iranian Presidency, Iranian President Hasan Rouhani speaks during an interview with state television at the presidency in Tehran, Iran. (Photo credit: AP/Presidency Office, Rouzbeh Jadidoleslam)

A telephone conversation between US President Barack Obama and Iranian President Hasan Rouhani leads the news in Arabic media Sunday, focusing on reactions to the conversation in Iran.

“Rouhani and Obama’s telephone conversation confuses Tehran,” reads the headline of Saudi-owned newspaper A-Sharq Al-Awsat, reporting on “two narratives” surrounding the circumstances of the conversation. A White House source claimed that Rouhani expressed his will to speak to Obama before leaving New York, while Rouhani himself said upon his return to Iran that he received a phone call from Obama on the way to the airport and the two discussed the Iranian nuclear issue.

“Two conflicting narratives regarding Obama and Rouhani’s conversation; and Washington notified Tel Aviv about the contents of the call,” reads the headline of London-based daily Al-Hayat, featuring a photo of demonstrators — it’s unclear if they’re pro or anti — awaiting Rouhani at the Tehran airport.

According to Al-Hayat, Iranians responded differently to the first such conversation in 34 years, with “fundamentalists considering it a crossing of red lines, while reformists and moderates welcomed it.”

The daily reports on the mixed reception Rouhani received at the Tehran airport, with supporters calling out “we thank you Rouhani” and opponents shouting “death to America” and “death to Israel.” One man even threw a shoe at Rouhani’s motorcade, which according to Al-Hayat missed the president’s car.

Taking the side of Iran’s optimists, Saudi news site Elaph claims that “Iranians expected much, and immediately, from the phone conversation between Hasan Rouhani and Barack Obama. But the matter requires time to regain lost confidence between the two sides, despite the appreciation of Iranians for Obama’s gesture, which they considered a personal farewell to Rouhani,” reads the article.

Qatari news channel Al-Jazeera tries to understand why Rouhani refused to meet Obama during his stay in New York, despite the American wish to realize such a meeting. Jamal Abdi, director of policy at the National Iranian American Council, told the channel that a televised handshake between Obama and Rouhani would bear “historic significance” and the Iranians would prefer such a photo-op to occur after an agreement is reached with the international community on the nuclear issue.

Meanwhile, Arab columnists struggle to understand the new American approach toward Iran.

A-Sharq Al-Awsat columnist Tareq Homayed dubs Obama’s attitude toward Iran “naïve,” claiming that the faltering relationship between the two countries cannot be reduced to the nuclear issue alone.

“The American president placed much hope in the initiative of testing Iran’s ‘seriousness’ to a degree that raises the question of whether Obama is a genius politician who sees something others don’t or whether he is merely an ‘optimistic’ intellectual. We use the term ‘intellectual’ of course as an understatement for the proper description. Will Obama manage to convince Iran to change? And what change? And to whose benefit?”

Iran, claims Homayed, seems much less gung-ho about rapprochement with the US than Obama does.

“Obama’s excitement raises the question: is the American-Iranian crisis only about the nuclear issue? What about a crisis lasting four decades? What about a host of issues troubling Washington’s allies, be they Arab or Israeli? What about Iran’s expansion in the region? What about Tehran’s support for the regime of Bashar Assad and his crimes? Some may claim that Obama is looking out for his country’s interests, which is true, but what is his country’s interest in naively placating Iran?”

“This is not the case of a genius politician as much as an ‘optimistic’ intellectual dealing with the region and politics with utter naiveté,” writes Homayed about Obama. “It seems like the Iranians understand this well.”

Meanwhile, Saudi columnist Jamal Khashaqji claims that Arabs need not be so terrified by Iranian-American rapprochement, since an alliance between the two countries will not necessarily come at the expense of Arabs.

“We are terrified every time American-Iranian reconciliation appears on the political horizon as is happening these days in New York,” writes Khashaqji in Al-Hayat.

“Some of us go so far as to believe in a ‘conspiracy,’ claiming there is a secret alliance and cooperation between the sides that will soon surface. The new alliance, goes the narrative, will soon be declared publicly at our expense in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf; replacing our favor with America in place of Iran and costing us dearly in interests and rights.”

“I think we all need psychological treatment and lessons in realpolitik to regain our self-confidence and realize we are stronger than we think,” continues Khashaqji.

“Reconciliation (and not ‘a deal’, which is an imperialistic word) with Iran has become more possible than any previous historic moment. But the problem is Iran. The Iranians are the only ones who refuse to change and insist on using all the [regional] changes for their political benefit.”

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One Comment on “Who’s afraid of American-Iranian reconciliation?”


  1. What reconciliation? You mean Obama’s appeasement of Iran.

    Munich, 1938: When the meeting broke up at 1:30 am, noted Schmidt,”Chamberlain bid a hearty farewell to the Führer.” As he left the Dreesen, a newspaperman intercepted him to ask: “Is it hopeless, sir?” Chamberlain replied: “I would not like to say that. It is up to the Czechs now.” In other words, peace was possible unless the Czechs stubbornly insisted on defending their homeland.

    In the House of Commons, on May 2, 1935, Winston Churchill said

    “When the situation was manageable it was neglected, and now that it is thoroughly out of hand, we apply the remedies which then might have effected a cure. There is nothing new in the story. It is as old as the Sibylline books. It falls into that long dismal catalogue of the fruitlessness of experience and the confirmed unteachability of mankind. Want of foresight, unwillingness to act when action would be simple and effective, lack of clear thinking, confusion of counsel until the emergency comes, until self-preservation strikes its jarring gong – these are the features which constitute the endless repetition of history.”

    President Obama in his speech to the UNGA said: “Real breakthroughs on these two issues – Iran’s nuclear program, and Israeli-Palestinian peace – would have a profound and positive impact on the entire Middle East and North Africa.”

    The world is facing its gravest moments since the Cuban Missile Crisis. If Iran gets the bomb it will probably use it undeterred, since according to Bernard Lewis – “for people with this mindset, M.A.D. is not a constraint; it is an inducement“. Millions may die. But what does President Obama put in the same sentence along with the prevention of this looming catastrophe? The resolution of the Arab –Israeli conflict which ranks 49th in terms of number of fatalities. This is absurd. It demonstrates that President Obama either does not understand the magnitude of the Iranian threat or he has inflated the importance of the Arab –Israeli conflict hundredfold . Either way, his policies are detached from reality.

    President Obama’s abysmal leadership – yet nobody cares
    http://www.madisdead.blogspot.co.il/2013/09/president-obamas-abysmal-leadership-yet.html


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