Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei Says He Made A Mistake In Allowing Nuclear Talks In 2015

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei speaks at the Hussayniyeh of Imam Khomeini in Tehran, Iran, August 13, 2018. Official Khamenei website/Handout via REUTERS

Reuters: Iran Supreme Leader admits mistake over nuclear talks

(Reuters) - Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has admitted he made a mistake in allowing the country’s foreign minister to speak to his U.S. counterpart during negotiations that led to a 2015 international nuclear agreement.

International sanctions on Iran were lifted when the pact with world powers came into force in 2016, but the expected level of foreign investment to help revive the economy has never materialized. Then this May President Donald Trump pulled out of the agreement and is now reimposing U.S. sanctions in stages.

Khamenei, who rarely admits in public to making errors, said he had done just that over the nuclear talks. “With the issue of the nuclear negotiations, I made a mistake in permitting our foreign minister to speak with them. It was a loss for us,” he said.

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WNU Editor: And the alternative of not talking and having complete sanctions is better? The Supreme leader is not suffering, but his people are. And while the Iranian government may have had the support of its base in the past, it is his base that is protesting now .... What We Know About Iran's Fresh Rash Of Street Protests (RFE).

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

The neocon fantasy dies hard.

"If we just apply enough pressure the people will rise and overthrow the regime."

Does anyone have an explanation for why neocons are so bad at comprehending human nature? People despise foreigners telling them how to live and what to do, yet these fat-heads will never, ever, ever give up on regime change.

Anonymous said...

Last I checked the neocons were starting to jump into the blue wave...Someones gotta protect us from the Ruskies.

Unknown said...
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Anonymous said...

Talking and telling someone to stop doing what upsets you is a good thing. It's called diplomacy. The alternatives are worse.

Unknown said...
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