Iran's Foreign Minister Fired

Written by FrumForum News on Monday December 13, 2010

Haaretz reports:

Iran's hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad appointed the country's top nuclear official as the caretaker foreign minister on Monday.

Ahmadinejad wanted the nuclear scientist to be his foreign affairs chief when he became president in 2005, but factional pressures forced him to accept a different candidate and Salehi was pushed to the political sidelines.

But on Monday, Ahmadinejad appointed him caretaker in place of dismissed Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki with whom the president's relations had never been smooth.

With his doctorate from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, awarded in the 1970s, Salehi has played key roles in Iran's nuclear programme which has been one of the main causes of tensions with the United States and the West.

In 1997, he became the international face of Tehran's nuclear programme when he was appointed ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the United Nations' nuclear watchdog.

In that post he had to defend what Iran sees as its right to peaceful technology against hostile countries that believe Tehran is seeking nuclear weapons. The issue remains central to Iran's relations with the rest of the world.

As nuclear envoy, Salehi earned respect among diplomats, many of whom harboured suspicions about Iran's true nuclear aims, but valued his reasonable approach and professionalism.

"The important thing to note is that Iran had to do some of its activities very discreetly because of the sanctions that have been imposed on Iran for the past 25 years," Salehi said in 2003 after handing over previously undisclosed details of the nuclear programme to the IAEA.

Failing to get the foreign minister position Ahmadinejad wanted for him, in 2005 Salehi entered the political wilderness, serving as an under-secretary general of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference, a regional grouping where his fluent Arabic was an asset.

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