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Hassan Rohani | The New Iranian President.

Team behind Iran's new president comes with Western accent


TEHRAN, Iran – Just days after Hasan Rouhani's election victory in Iran, his top advisers and allies gathered for a closed-door strategy session at a think tank run by the new president. The group, lugging spread sheets, notes and policy papers, also carried something new into the mix — an array of degrees from Western universities.

Soon after Rouhani's swearing-in Sunday, he is expected to unveil key members of his government and give more clarity about his behind-the-scenes brain trust. In all likelihood, the core of his team will include figures whose academic pedigrees run through places such as California, Washington and London.

The Western-looking credentials of Rouhani's inner circle are no surprise. Rouhani himself studied in Scotland. What remains unclear, however, is how much they could actually influence Iranian policies and foster potential outreach diplomacy such as direct talks with the U.S. or possible breakthroughs in wider negotiations over Tehran's nuclear program.

"Studying in the West doesn't mean you would make concessions to the West," said Rasool Nafisi, an Iranian affairs analyst at Strayer University in Virginia. "What it does mean is that the level of understanding and ability to pick up nuances are much higher. The next step is seeing how much of that can translate into changes at the top with the ruling clerics, where it really counts."

On many levels, this is the fundamental question as the clock starts on Rouhani's presidency after eight years of the hectoring style of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

There is little doubt that Rouhani will bring a far calmer and more measured approach. That alone may help with efforts to rebuild strained ties with Europe and open new possibilities for deal-making after the expected restart of nuclear talks with world powers.

But Rouhani's Western-educated political entourage is not about to steer Iran in a completely new direction after his election victory last month.

Rouhani, a cleric and former top nuclear negotiator, does not stand against the Islamic system or the firm controls at the top: Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the Revolutionary Guard. Khamenei has final say in all key matters, including Rouhani's selections for key Cabinet posts such as the foreign and intelligence ministers.

That leaves Rouhani — effectively the international face of Iran — with the task of projecting a new image of dialogue rather than diatribes on the world stage. Inside Iran, Rouhani has to adopt the role of salesman: trying to get Khamenei and the ruling clerics to buy into his views that interaction with Washington and its allies could bring dividends such as steps to ease tightening economic sanctions.

Many of those being considered for Cabinet posts share Rouhani's approach, including a former deputy foreign minister, Mahmoud Vaezi, who holds degrees in electrical engineering from California State University, Sacramento and San Jose State University. He began his doctorate in foreign relations at Louisiana State University but finished the degree in Poland.

Vaezi was head of the foreign ministry's European and American affairs section from 1990-97 under reformist President Mohammad Khatami. In recent years, Vaezi has been a senior figure at Rowhani's Center for Strategic Research.

"The potential candidates ... are those who understand international relations and understand the language of the West," said Tehran-based political analyst Behrouz Shojaei. "This shows Rouhani is serious in seeking to ease tensions with the outside world and improve Iran's economy."

Another potential contender for foreign minister is Mohammad Javad Zarif, who did postgraduate studies at San Francisco State University and obtained a doctorate in international law and policy at the University of Denver.

Zarif also raised his profile in the U.S. as a diplomat at Iran's U.N. Mission in New York during a five-year posting that ended in 2007. In one of his last public events, Zarif was a headline speaker at a conference in New Brunswick, New Jersey, on conflict resolution whose participants included the current U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel.

Meanwhile, Hossein Mousavian, currently a research scholar at Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, is likely to hold a key foreign policy adviser role. Mousavian also graduated from Sacramento State.

Officials with academic roots in the West are nothing new in the Middle East. Many Gulf Arab leaders and top officials studied in Europe or the U.S. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu went to high school outside Philadelphia and returned to study at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Jordan's King Abdullah II attended boarding schools in England and Massachusetts and then moved on to Britain's royal military academy Sandhurst.

But Iran's elected leadership — the presidency and top parliamentary posts — has had far fewer Western-educated figures. In the years after the 1979 Islamic Revolution, Western credentials were viewed with suspicion. Ahmadinejad, who studied in Iran, has strongly favored advisers who also have homegrown academic backgrounds.

Rouhani's administration could mark a strong break and include advisers whose connections with the West straddle before and after the Islamic Revolution.

Among them is Rouhani's younger brother, Hossein Fereidoun, who is helping the president-elect put together his Cabinet list.

Fereidoun was a member of the security team when the Islamic Revolution's leaders, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, returned from exile in France in 1979. He later served in Iran's U.N. Mission. Rouhani previously went by the family name Fereidoun, but dropped it in an apparent attempt to hide from authorities before the Islamic Revolution.

The review of potential candidates for economic roles includes Chamber of Commerce president Mohammad Nahavandian, who holds a doctorate in economics from George Washington University, and Mohammad Bagher Nobakht, who holds an economics doctorate from Paisley in Britain, and was spokesman of Rouhani's campaign office.

A possible candidate for the critical oil ministry post is Mohammad Reza Nematzadeh, a former deputy oil minister and president of Iran's state oil company, who has an engineering degree from California State Polytechnic University.

But speculation was growing that Rouhani could look to a former oil minister, Bijan Zanganeh, who was ousted when Ahmadinejad took office in 2005.

Some semiofficial Iranian news agencies, including ISNA, cited sources saying that Rouhani will tap a former defense minister, Mohammed Forouzandeh, as the chief nuclear negotiator. Such a choice would bring a relative novice in international dialogue into a critical role. Rouhani's aides have not commented on the report, and other names such as former foreign minister Ali Akbar Velayati have been raised in the Iranian media.

Other noteworthy possibilities include Ali Jannati as head of the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance, where the wide-ranging mandate includes oversight of foreign media in Iran. Jannati is considered a moderate, but his father, Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, is an ultra hard-line cleric who often leads the nationally broadcast Friday prayers from Tehran University.


Read more: Team behind Iran's new president comes with Western accent | Fox News
 
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Putin to meet new Iranian president in September – ambassador

President Vladimir Putin will meet Iran’s newly elected president for the first time in Kyrgyzstan in September, the Iranian ambassador to Moscow said on Wednesday. Media reported last week that the Russian president would go to Iran in August for talks with Hassan Rouhani on Tehran’s nuclear program. Ambassador Seyed Mahmoud-Reza Sajjadi described the reports as false. Putin's first talks with Rouhani would be on the sidelines of a summit of the six-nation Shanghai Cooperation Organization in the Kyrgyz capital, Bishkek on September 13.

July 31, 2013 - RT News
 
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Hard-Liners Challenge Iran's Proposed Cabinet


Hard-line Iranian lawmakers have challenged the new president's proposed Cabinet makeup, accusing him of nominating pro-Western figures and opposition supporters to ministerial posts.

But President Hasan Rouhani told parliament on Monday that his government's priority will be to ease tensions with the outside world and improve the sanctions-battered economy.

The remarks came as a debate over the proposed Cabinet got under way in parliament. It's expected to take three days with lawmakers voting on each of the 18-member Cabinet on Wednesday.

Rouhani won a landslide victory in June presidential elections, defeating his conservative rivals. He took the oath of office on Aug. 4 and sent his proposed Cabinet list to the parliament the same day.

Rouhani has urged for dialogue with the West over Iran's controversial nuclear program.



Hard-Liners Challenge Iran's Proposed Cabinet - ABC News
 
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People have sent bunch of douchebags to parliament, if a cow was sitting instead of some of them in there, it would be much more helpful.
 
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People have sent bunch of douchebags to parliament, if a cow was sitting instead of some of them in there, it would be much more helpful.

I just watched the summary in news . It was funny to see those stupid excuses against Rouhani's team .

A bunch of Basiji and Hezbollahi bastards are in the government that don't let any change happens . God 'm going to change my mind about many things if they don't end such crap .
 
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I just watch the summary in news . It was funny to see those stupid excuses against Rouhani's team .

A bunch of Basiji and Hezbollahi bastards are in the government that don't let any change happens . God 'm going to change my mind about many things if they don't end such crap .



There should be massive protests infront of parliament in support of Dr. Rohani!
 
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many of these idiots are representatives of Tehran , the majority of people in Tehran are pro reformists or dont believe in regime.
and no one is reformist among 30 representatives of Tehran in the parliament.
and most extremist and idiot representatives in parliament that we hear their names more than others belong to Tehran.

whether our parliament is really the representative of our people??


this is the list of Tehran representatives's"

جدول اسامی و گرایش سیاسی 30 نماینده تهران در مجلس نهم + نمودار
 
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Is it true that there is infighting between various fractions within the parlament? The way you guys present it the power seems to be in the hands of the ultra-conservatives
 
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Iranian President appoints a woman, Elham Aminzadeh, as Vice-President for Legal Affairs

President Hassan Rohani in a decree on Sunday named Elham Aminzadeh as Vice-President for Legal Affairs.



The president said in the text of the decree that she has been appointed to the post in light of her scientific competence and judicial qualifications as well as legislative experience and moral merits.

I Hope that under grace of God, you will be successful in serving noble Iranian nation and the Islamic Republic abiding by law, moderation and morality, the charter of the Government of Prudence and Hope.

Iranian President appoints a woman, Elham Aminzadeh, as Vice-President for Legal Affairs
 
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سعید حجاریان در گفت*وگوی تفصیلی با خبرگزاری تسنیم:
در انتخابات ۸۸ تقلب نشد
تسنیم: آقای حجاریان، درباره ادعاهایی که درباره تقلب شده بودید، چه نظری دارید؟

- حجاریان: بنده چند بار گفته*ام که بحث ما این نیست که تخلف و یا تقلب شده است. به*نظر من واقعه*ای اتفاق افتاده است که اسم آن "تدلیس سیستماتیک" است. در توضیح تدلیس باید بگویم که مثلاً اگر شما سه سال در شهرداری به مردم پول بدهید، بعد هم چهار سال در دولت به مردم سیب*زمینی و یارانه و پول یامفت بدهید و رأی بخرید، تدلیس سیستماتیک است. درست است؟

در انتخابات Û¸Û¸ تقلب نشد/ Ø*فظ آرا برای روØ*انی کار سختی است/ هرروز کیهان را می*خوانم

Interesting, to say the least!
 
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^^ He formed his cabinet and 15 out of 18 got approved. Not bad.

The case that needs immediate attention is the nuclear issue. Hope he forms a competent nuclear team and get rid of the sanctions
 
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^^ He formed his cabinet and 15 out of 18 got approved. Not bad.

The case that needs immediate attention is the nuclear issue. Hope he forms a competent nuclear team and get rid of the sanctions

What about the 3 that got weeded out, were they any good?
 
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I know that Mohammad-Ali Najafi was very good. He is a MIT alumni and he has served as minister of education and science and technology for 12 years. he was also previously a professor at Sharif university of technology.
What about the 3 that got weeded out, were they any good?
 
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