Preziosi ospiti condannano la politica iraniana+Faz: Il vertice di Teheran un fiasco per l’Iran

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Preziosi ospiti condannano la politica iraniana

FARNAZ FASSIHI
+ Faz   120830

Il vertice di Teheran un fiasco per l’Iran

–   Il nuovo Egitto, con un governo a dai Fratelli Musulmani, non intende stringere un’alleanza con gli sciiti iraniani, come evidenziato dalle dichiarazioni di Mursi alla conferenza annuale dei paesi non allineati a Teheran (120 paesi presenti), la prima visita di un presidente egiziano dalla rivoluzione iraniana del 1979; troppe le umiliazioni che i Fratelli musulmani hanno dovuto subire negli scorsi decenni da Tehran (FAZ)

o   Mursi ha condannato esplicitamente la repressione esercitata contro i ribelli dal regime siriano (definito oppressivo e privo di legittimazione), stretto alleato dell’Iran che lo aiuta militarmente, non consentendo ad Ahmadinejad di sfruttare propagandisticamente la sua presenza assieme a quella del segretario generale Onu, Ban Ki-Moon.

o   Simile condanna da Ban Ki-Moon per il regime siriano, con appello ad abbatterlo, e per la politica iraniana verso Israele.

–   L’Egitto di Mursi, potenza regionale risorta, ha concordato l’iniziativa con l’Arabia Saudita: non cerca l’avvicinamento di sunniti e sciiti ma l’isolamento dell’Iran, che viene di nuovo cacciato dal mondo arabo, linea che trova alleati in Occidente.

–   Tesi Faz: L’attacco di Mursi e la prevedibile reazione iraniana hanno dimostrato che non è possibile trovare con l’Iran una soluzione politica del conflitto in Siria.

–   Ultimo tentativo in tal senso la creazione di un gruppo di lavoro formato da Egitto, Arabia Saudita, Iran e Turchia proposta da Mursi.

–   L’Iran intendeva usare la piattaforma della conferenza dei non allineati per promuovere la sua politica verso la Siria, il programma nucleare, e tendere una mano a India e Sud Corea per aggirare le sanzioni economiche.

Wsj      120830

The Wall Street Journal

    MIDDLE EAST NEWS
    Updated August 30, 2012, 9:33 p.m. ET
Prized Guests Slam Iranian Policies

International Conference Seen as Showcase for Tehran Turns Sour as Egypt’s Leader, U.N. Chief Criticize Host’s Stances

By FARNAZ FASSIHI

 

–   BEIRUT—Two of Iran’s honored guests at the official opening of an international conference intended by Tehran to showcase its global stature slammed the Islamic Republic’s policies on Syria, Iran’s top ally in the region, and Israel, its No. 1 foe.

–   Egypt’s President Mohammed Morsi, in a speech to the annual meeting of the Non-Aligned Movement, which brought leaders of more than 120 nations to Iran, caused a stir by calling Syria’s regime oppressive and devoid of legitimacy.

–   The comment was a direct rebuke to Iran, which is aiding the Syrian leadership in its military crackdown against rebels.

–   "The bloodshed in Syria is the responsibility of all of us and will not stop until there is real intervention to stop it. The Syrian crisis is bleeding our hearts," Mr. Morsi said, in his first foreign-policy speech at an international venue.

–   United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon also blamed Syria’s regime for reacting to peaceful protests with "ruthless force," and called on the regime to take responsibility for ending the violence.

–   Syria and Israel make the backbone of Tehran’s foreign policy. Mr. Ban also offered harsh words for Iran’s stand toward Israel. "I strongly reject threats by any member state to destroy another or outrageous attempts to deny historical facts such as the Holocaust," he said in his speech at the conference.

–   Mr. Ban also called on Iran to cooperate more openly with the international community on its nuclear program and comply with U.N. Security Council resolutions. On Wednesday, he criticized Iran’s human-rights record, and brought up the issue in a meeting with Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

–   Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, sitting nearby during the speeches, frowned as he listened to the speeches by Messrs. Morsi and Ban. Mr. Ahmadinejad has threatened Israel and questioned accounts of the Holocaust.

–       We should all express our full support to the struggle of those who are demanding freedom and justice in Syria. Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi

–   The conference, which began with meetings on Sunday and closes Friday, offered Iran an opportunity to mend its image as an isolated and sanctioned country. But problems arose once the guests arrived, as Iran tried to script the conference to its own advantage only to have dignitaries stray from its narrative.

–   Iranian media, which had touted Mr. Morsi’s visit as a diplomatic coup that could signal a shift in improving Egypt-Iran relations, censored his speech. The simultaneous interpreter at the conference first stumbled then refrained from translating Mr. Morsi’s comments on Syria.

–   Only a few Iranian websites published the full speech. One called Mr. Morsi an "immature and new diplomat."

–   Iran and Egypt haven’t had diplomatic relations since Iran’s Islamic Revolution in 1979.

–       The bloodshed in Syria is the responsibility of all of us and will not stop until there is real intervention to stop it.’ Mr. Morsi

–   Syria’s delegation walked out of the conference room during the speech. Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Moallem, in an interview with Iran’s Arabic news channel Al Alam, said Mr. Morsi had violated the summit’s principles by meddling in another country’s affairs.

–   Mr. Morsi also praised the four caliphs of Sunni Islam at the start of his speech, an unusual evocation by an Arab leader. Iranians interpreted the comments as a jab at the Islamic Republic, a Shiite theocracy that doesn’t recognize the first three caliphs as legitimate.

–   Iran now holds the three-year presidency of the Non-Aligned Movement, which was created during the Cold War.

–   Iran used the conference as a platform to promote its policies on Syria, defend its nuclear program, and reach out to countries such as India and South Korea to try to work around the economic sanctions crippling its economy.

"The current order of the world…can’t continue. Everyone is tired of the current international geometry," Mr. Khamenei said in a speech Thursday. He reiterated that Iran’s nuclear program was for peaceful purposes and that the country would never give up on this right. Mr. Ahmadinejad and Mr. Khamenei had blasted the U.N. Security Council as outdated and a form of dictatorship by the most powerful countries.

    I strongly reject threats by any member state to destroy another or outrageous attempts to deny historical facts such as the Holocaust U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon

–   Meanwhile, Oil Minister Rostam Qassemi sought to negotiate oil deals with delegates to the conference, and Minister of Finance Shamsedin Hosseini was dispatched to greet the Indian delegation, the semi-official Fars News Agency reported.

Many Iranians complained about the government’s spending on the conference.

"I pray to God that this conference isn’t just about meeting and greeting and something useful comes out of it. It would be a big gain for the country and people if the result is easing or removing the sanctions," said Mahin, 32, a Tehran resident who didn’t give her last name.

That appears unlikely, analysts say. "When the dust settles and the last NAM diplomat has left Tehran, what has changed? Iran remains under a harsh international sanctions regime, foreign investment remains paltry, and its only reliable allies remain the dream team of Venezuela, Syria, and North Korea," said Karim Sadjadpour, an expert of Iran at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Write to Farnaz Fassihi at farnaz.fassihi@wsj.com

A version of this article appeared August 31, 2012, on page A10 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Prized Guests Slam Iranian Policies.

Copyright 2012 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved
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Faz      120830

Gipfel in Teheran Fiasko für Iran

30.08.2012 · Erst liest UN-Generalsekretär Ban Ki-moon Teheran die Leviten, dann bezeichnet der ägyptische Präsident Mursi Syrien ohne Scheu als „Unterdrücker-Regime“. Der Blockfreien-Gipfel wird für Gastgeber Iran zum Fiasko.

Von Rainer Hermann

–   Iran hatte dem ägyptischen Präsidenten Mursi mit großen Hoffnungen einen roten Teppich ausgerollt. Der aber tat seinen Gastgebern nicht den Gefallen und verhinderte, dass seine Reise – die erste eines ägyptischen Staatspräsidenten nach Iran seit der islamischen Revolution 1979 – propagandistisch ausgeschlachtet werden konnte.

–   Dank der Anwesenheit des UN-Generalsekretärs Ban Ki-moon und Mursis auf dem Blockfreien-Gipfel hatte Iran der Welt zu zeigen z. Die Teilnahme der beiden endete jedoch mit einem Fiasko.

–   Erst las Ban Ki-moon, wenn auch in gesetzten diplomatischen Worten, Iran wegen des Atomprogramms, der Missachtung der Menschenrechte und des Aufrufs zur Zerstörung Israels die Leviten. Dann führte Mursi Iran vor und ließ die Mienen der entsetzten Gastgeber versteinern. Er nannte Assads Syrien, zu dem Iran weiterhin hält, ein Unterdrückerregime und rief zum Sturz des Machthabers auf.

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–   Mursis Außenpolitik hat mit seinem Auftritt in Teheran weitere Konturen gewonnen. Endgültig passé ist der Verdacht, ein von den Muslimbrüdern geführtes Ägypten strebe eine Allianz mit den Schiiten Irans an. Zu erwarten war das auch nicht. Die Liste der Demütigungen, die die ägyptischen Muslimbrüder in den vergangenen Jahrzehnten durch Teherans arrogante Machthaber zu ertragen hatten, ist zu lang.

–   Dass Mursi seinen Vorstoß mit Saudi-Arabien abgestimmt hatte, sorgte dort für Erleichterung: Auch das Ägypten der Muslimbrüder steht an seiner Seite. Mursi betreibt keine Annäherung von Sunniten und Schiiten, sondern die Isolierung Irans.

–   Zudem drängt die wiedergeborene Regionalmacht Ägypten Iran wieder aus der arabischen Welt heraus. Das verschafft Mursi auch im Westen Freunde.

–   Mursis Teheraner Paukenschlag wird nicht folgenlos bleiben. Sein Vorstoß und die vorhersehbare Reaktion Irans haben gezeigt, dass eine politische Lösung zur Beilegung des Konflikts in Syrien mit Iran nicht möglich ist.

–   Der Vorschlag Mursis, eine Arbeitsgruppe aus Ägypten, Saudi-Arabien, Iran und der Türkei zu bilden – den vier Ländern also, die konkurrierende politische Modelle entwickelt haben -, dürfte der wohl letzte Versuch sein, noch eine politische Lösung des Bürgerkriegs zu finden.

–   Sollte Iran das nicht rasch begreifen, ist der Vorschlag vom Tisch. Dann werden andere Lösungen gesucht, bei denen Iran gewiss nicht mitredet.

Quelle: F.A.Z.

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