OpinionIran in the World PressIran less than anxious at restive nuclear watchdogs

Iran less than anxious at restive nuclear watchdogs

-

Financial Times: When Mahmoud Ahmadi-Nejad, Iran’s fundamentalist president, recently met other senior leaders in Tehran, he suggested they should not worry unduly about growing western pressure. Financial Times

By Gareth Smyth

When Mahmoud Ahmadi-Nejad, Iran’s fundamentalist president, recently met other senior leaders in Tehran, he suggested they should not worry unduly about growing western pressure.

UN sanctions – which could follow if Iran’s nuclear file is soon referred to the Security Council – were “not important,” he said. “That’s the way the fundamentalists think,” said a regime insider familiar with the meeting.

Since taking over in August, Mr Ahmadi-Nejad and his new officials have faced an escalation in the international dispute about Iran’s nuclear programme.

European governments last month backed the US in persuading the governing board of the International Atomic Energy Agency to find Iran in “non-compliance” with the Nuclear Non-Proliferation treaty, so paving the way for referral to the Security Council in November.

Since then, Tehran has rejected the IAEA board’s request for greater “transparency” – including inspectors’ access to individuals and documents – and dismissed its calls to end the conversion of raw uranium into gas; an early phase in the sensitive uranium-enrichment process, which it resumed in August as two-year talks with the Europeans stalled.

Some Iranian officials are privately expressing concern about the conduct of diplomacy since the president replaced many experienced officials, including those handling the nuclear dispute. The speech he delivered at the UN summit in August was applauded at home but dismissed as confrontational by European officials.

While Mr Ahmadi-Nejad faces little immediate domestic pressure to moderate his stance, some politicians are beginning to question both his strategy and competence.

Last Friday, Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, the powerful former president whom Mr Ahmadi-Nejad defeated in June’s election, warned the west against “intimidation”, but also cautioned Iran against “sloganeering”.

Mohammad Atrianfar, editor of Shargh, the reformist newspaper, has argued not all countries should expect to enrich uranium, and Hossein Abdeh-Tabrizi, secretary general of the Tehran

Stock Exchange, has linked falling stock prices to the nuclear issue.

But Mr Ahmadi-Nejad may be taking advice elsewhere. Among the senior clerics he visited last week in the holy city of Qom was Ayatollah Mohammad-Taghi Mesbah-Yazdi, dubbed the “spiritual father” of the fundamentalists and an advocate of isolation from the west.

The sense Iran is under attack is shared by many of Mr Ahmadi-Nejad’s new cabinet, half of whom have a military background. “Their outlook is not the win-win of diplomats, but the zero-sum of the battlefield,” said an analyst.

“It’s a complicated deadlock – not for the first time in Iran – but what’s new is that Mr Ahmadi-Nejad and his team are not too unhappy about it,” said the regime insider. “They will continue [in defiance”> until their heads hit the stone. Then they will give way, but it’s hard for them or anyone else to predict the critical point. And that’s what’s so dangerous.”

The fundamentalists’ confidence comes partly from Iran’s likely resilience against sanctions.

As Opec’s second-largest producer, due to receive $36bn this year from sales, Iran is buoyed by high oil prices and does not expect exports to be curbed. The country is largely self-sufficient in food, and neighbours have porous borders. Foreign investment, outside energy, is already limited.

Moreover, Mr Ahmadi-Nejad remains popular at home after his landslide election victory. His cabinet’s first decision set up a “compassion fund”, freeing the equivalent of $1.3bn from oil income for a scheme to help young people find jobs, homes and a marriage partner.

The fundamentalists also argue that the outside world, and not Iran, is to blame for the nuclear confrontation. Two years of negotiations with the Europeans produced no tangible benefits, they say. According to the regime insider, former officials in charge of the nuclear file argued that the Europeans would eventually make concessions, including allowing Iran to keep a pilot enrichment plant. “But it seems the Europeans did not accept and so the talks with them ended. We’re now on a different road, heading in another direction,” he said.

Latest news

Inflation in Iran and the Limits of What an Agreement with the United States Can Achieve

A sick political system inevitably produces a sick economy. In an absolute dictatorship where political and social freedoms are...

Day 2 of Free Iran 2026: International Figures Rally Behind NCRI Alternative

PARIS — The second day of the Free Iran 2026 World Summit brought together a broad range of former...

Free Iran 2026 Summit in Paris Draws International Support for Democratic Change in Iran

PARIS, June 20, 2026 — Political leaders, former government officials, parliamentarians, and human rights advocates from Europe and North...

Iran’s Water Crisis: Women on the Front Lines of a Silent Disaster

Iran’s water crisis is no longer merely an environmental or economic challenge; it has become one of the country’s...

Child Laborers: The Silent Victims of Poverty and Inflation in Iran

On June 15, the state-run Shargh newspaper published a report on child labor titled "Childhood on a Work Shift,"...

Iran’s Regime Executes Political Prisoners Javad Zamani and Abolfazl Saedi

Iran's regime hanged two young men, Javad Zamani and Abolfazl Saedi, in the early hours of Tuesday, June 16,...

Must read

Iran-Backed Cell in Bahrain Is Identified by Authorities

Iran Focus London, 16 Nov - Thirty-seven-year-old Zuhair Ebrahim...

Iranian opposition confident on EU case

AP: A court ruling in Britain could force the...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you