Infighting hurts Iran foreign policy:Zarif

In an interview published on Tuesday, Javad Zarif has seemingly blamed Iran's hardline factions for his resignation as the country's foreign minister.

Iran's foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif

Iran's foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif Source: AAP

Fighting between parties and factions in Iran is a "deadly poison" undermining foreign policy, Mohammad Javad Zarif has been quoted as saying in an interview published a day after he resigned as Iranian foreign minister.

Zarif's comments suggest he may have quit over pressure from hardline elements who have long criticised his role in negotiating a landmark 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.

"We first have to remove our foreign policy from the issue of party and factional fighting," Zarif told the Jomhuri Eslami newspaper.

"The deadly poison for foreign policy is for foreign policy to become an issue of party and factional fighting," he added.

The Fars news agency reported that the interview had taken place last week, before the resignation.

President Hassan Rouhani has not formally accepted the resignation which Zarif announced on Monday on Instagram.

A majority of Iran's parliamentarians signed a letter to Rouhani on Tuesday, asking for Zarif to continue his job, Ali Najafi Khoshroodi, the spokesman for the parliament's National Security and Foreign Policy commission told the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA).

Zarif told the newspaper he had followed the guidance of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the highest authority in the Islamic Republic, during the nuclear negotiations.

He said US President Donald Trump and his national security adviser John Bolton, rather than Rouhani, were to blame for the US withdrawal from the deal.

Trump withdrew from the deal in May and reimposed sanctions on Iran.

"Instead of condemning Trump, why do you come and condemn the elected president of the people? You come and condemn the foreign policy?" Zarif said.

"What result does that have? The result is that people will become hopeless about the future."

Zarif urged diplomats and other employees at the foreign ministry not to quit on Tuesday, according to IRNA.


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Source: AAP


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