TEHRAN: Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said yesterday US President Barack Obama’s offer of better ties was just a “slogan,” but pledged Tehran would respond to any real policy shift by Washington.
Speaking a day after Obama’s videotaped overture, Khamenei, Iran’s most powerful figure with final say on all matters of state, said he saw no such change yet from the United States.
But he added: “You change, our behavior will change.” Sharply criticizing US actions toward Iran since its 1979 revolution which toppled the US-backed shah, he said the United States was “hated in the world” and should stop interfering in other countries’ internal affairs. “They give the slogan of change but in practice no change is seen ... We haven’t seen any change,” Khamenei said.
In a major shift from the approach of his predecessor George W. Bush, who branded Iran part of an “axis of evil” and spearheaded a drive to isolate it, Obama has talked of extending a hand of peace to Tehran if it “unclenches its fist.”
Khamenei said a change of US “words” was not enough and that Obama had “insulted” Iran and its government immediately after taking office, without elaborating. While reaching out to Iran, Obama’s administration has also warned of tougher sanctions if it continues to defy UN demands to halt sensitive nuclear work. “You give the slogan of negotiation and pressure again ... Our nation cannot be talked to like this,” Khamenei said. During his televised speech at Iran’s most prominent religious shrine in the northeastern city of Mashhad, the big crowd chanted: “Death to America. Death to America.”
Khamenei made clear his view that more was needed from Washington if it wanted better ties with his country. “They say we have extended a hand toward Iran. What kind of hand is this? If the extended hand is covered with a velvet glove but underneath it, the hand is made of cast iron, this does not have a good meaning at all,” he said. Noting Obama’s New Year greeting, he added: “In the same congratulatory message they accuse the Iranian nation of supporting terrorism, pursuing nuclear arms and such things ... what has changed?” Analysts have said that Iran is setting tough conditions for dialogue to buy time for its ponderous, opaque decision-making process.
Adding to uncertainty, Iran holds a presidential election in June that could strengthen moderate voices backing detente over more hard-line opponents.
Khamenei accused the United States of links with “terrorist movements” operating in border areas near Pakistan and also criticized it for freezing Iranian assets and for backing former Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war.
“Iran has many grievances and it expects that the United States would finally come to recognise this,” said Professor Mohammad Marandi of North American studies at Tehran University. “Change does not come about by saying Happy New Year.”