Iran's Supreme Leader Renews Support to ‘Strategic Action’ Plan

Iran Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei received the speaker and members of the Parliament (Khamenei website)
Iran Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei received the speaker and members of the Parliament (Khamenei website)
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Iran's Supreme Leader Renews Support to ‘Strategic Action’ Plan

Iran Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei received the speaker and members of the Parliament (Khamenei website)
Iran Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei received the speaker and members of the Parliament (Khamenei website)

Iran Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei reiterated his support for a law passed by the Iranian Parliament to reduce Iran’s commitments to a 2015 nuclear agreement in response to US sanctions.

In a meeting with the speaker and members of the Parliament, Khamenei praised the Parliament for passing the "Strategic Action Plan", underlining that it has saved the country from uncertainty regarding the nuclear issue.

He described it as a "strategic" move that deserves praise, saying: "The Strategic Action law to lift sanctions was a fundamental resolution. [..] We can even see the results of its implementation on a global scale."

The law was enacted two weeks before President Joe Biden assumed his position in the White House.

Based on the law, Tehran raised the rate of uranium enrichment to 20 percent at the Natanz facility in January 2021 before it began enriching uranium to 60 percent at the facility later in April. At the same time, Tehran and the major powers began talks to revive the 2015 nuclear deal.

Iran renounced the Additional Protocol, which it had agreed to under the nuclear deal. After abandoning the protocol, Tehran refused to hand over the surveillance camera recordings that monitor its sensitive activities.

At that time, Tehran justified the strategic move in response to the assassination of top nuclear and defense scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh. It took months to persuade senior officials to pass the law.

Negotiations on reviving the nuclear deal stalled last year after Tehran insisted on closing an international investigation into three unknown sites where enriched uranium was found.

Earlier this year, IAEA inspectors found uranium enriched at 83.7 percent at the Fordow facility, raising fears of changing the course of the Iranian nuclear program, with the accumulation of uranium stocks by 60 percent. Weapons-grade uranium is enriched at 90 percent.

Khamenei made several recommendations to lawmakers to avoid internal disputes, saying that forces and parties that do not complement each other will be ineffective.

He called for a view based on cooperation and solidarity between the state agencies in Iran.

Khamenei touched on the legislative elections scheduled for next February and March to elect a new parliament.

"After three years, I still consider this Parliament revolutionary, young and dynamic. Of course, this is a general view that does not consider the exceptions that may exist in the Parliament," said Khamenei defending the Parliament's performance.

Khamenei warned the parliamentarians of the duality of "rapprochement or destruction" in the Parliament's relationship with other branches of government, especially the executive branch.

"In the destructive view, both parties see each other as rivals to uproot each other. This view is dangerous and problematic for both the government and the Parliament."

Last week, Khamenei met with senior officials from the Foreign Ministry and said that "expediency" means having flexibility where it is necessary to bypass hard and rocky obstacles to continue a path.

He criticized the misinterpretation of the term "heroic flexibility," which he used before the 2013 nuclear talks involving secret talks with the US through Omani mediation. Later, the discussions became public within the "5+1," resulting in the 2015 agreement.



Putin Says Russia Willing to Seek Compromises between Iran and Israel

Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting with heads of leading media outlets from the BRICS member countries in Moscow Region, Russia October 18, 2024. Sputnik/Vyacheslav Prokofyev/Pool via Reuters
Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting with heads of leading media outlets from the BRICS member countries in Moscow Region, Russia October 18, 2024. Sputnik/Vyacheslav Prokofyev/Pool via Reuters
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Putin Says Russia Willing to Seek Compromises between Iran and Israel

Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting with heads of leading media outlets from the BRICS member countries in Moscow Region, Russia October 18, 2024. Sputnik/Vyacheslav Prokofyev/Pool via Reuters
Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting with heads of leading media outlets from the BRICS member countries in Moscow Region, Russia October 18, 2024. Sputnik/Vyacheslav Prokofyev/Pool via Reuters

Russia is ready to help seek compromises between arch-foes Israel and Iran, President Vladimir Putin said on Friday, saying these would be difficult but possible.

"We are in contact with Israel, we are in contact with Iran. We have quite trusting relations. And we would very much like this endless exchange of blows to be stopped at some point. And for such ways to resolve the situation to be found that would satisfy both sides," Putin told reporters.

"The answer to this question always lies in the search for compromises. Are they possible in this situation or not? I think so. No matter how difficult it may be, but in my opinion, it is possible."

Israel has decapitated the leadership of Iran's allies Hamas and Hezbollah in recent weeks, and Iran fired missiles into Israel on Oct. 1. The region is now braced for Israel's response.

Putin said Russia was willing to get involved if both sides wanted that.

"If this is in demand, we are ready to do everything in our power in contact with both sides to help find these compromises," he said.