PHOTO: At 5th Attempt, Rouhani Gets Parliamentary Approval of Science Minister

LATEST: Rouhani Visits Family of Assassinated Nuclear Scientist to Proclaim Iran’s Victory

UPDATE 1130 GMT: For the first time since the failure of the Vienna talks to reach a comprehensive nuclear agreement, the Supreme Leader has declared that Iran will pursue a “resistance” economy if there is no resolution.

Ayatollah Khamenei told a conference of Basij militia, “The Iranian nation and the other negotiating parties should note that the US will be the main loser if the nuclear talks fail.”

Significantly — given the attack by the Revolutionary Guards and hardliners on Iran’s negotiating team — Ayatollah Khamenei praised it for “serious endeavors and resistance….Unlike their American counterparts, [our negotiators] don’t change their words on a daily basis.”

I'm not opposed to extension of #NuclearTalks for the same reason that I was not agnst negotiating. #IranTalksVienna pic.twitter.com/a0bs7hpRkh — Khamenei.ir (@khamenei_ir) November 27, 2014

#Iran's nuclear delegation is truly diligent& serious; they do resist agnst being bullied& work hard out of logic& caring. @JZarif @Araghchi — Khamenei.ir (@khamenei_ir) November 27, 2014

US is the most ill-mannered &UK is the most cunning;if talks don't achieve results it's the US that faces loss. #Iran pic.twitter.com/E4LVh5ycrE — Khamenei.ir (@khamenei_ir) November 27, 2014

Iran’s regime has publicly split over the nuclear talks with the 5+1 Powers, three days after the failure to reach a comprehensive agreement.

The Revolutionary Guards and hardline factions broke their initial silence over the outcome, which extended negotiations to July 1, with attacks on Wednesday on the negotiating team, the Rouhani Government — and even the Supreme Leader’s top foreign policy advisor.

Speaking at a commemoration of the Basij militia and the 1980s Iran-Iraq war, the Guards’ top commander, Mohammad Ali Jaffari, derided “American conspiracies” and said, “It became clear that America is not reliable [in the nuclear talks].” He challenged the US-led sanctions regime: “The people know that the economic and political pressure and military threats are because…the people will not submit to American force.”

However, the most interesting part of Jafari’s address was about the Iranian side. Saying “we have to rely on our own ability”, he indicated that Tehran’s negotiators had not been firm enough in the discussions.

Guards outlet Vatan-e Emrooz Vatan-e-Emrooz had only one giant word on its front page: “Nothing”. On the name page, it railed, “A year has passed since the Geneva accord. Nuclear negotiations for the removal of sanctions did not reach a result.”

Raja News, also linked to the Guards and to hardline critics of the Government, went even farther. It jabbed at the Supreme Leader’s chief foreign policy advisor, Ali Akbar Velayati, for his backing of the negotiations and the Iranian approach.

Raja’s attack returned to a tense moment in the 2013 Presidential campaign, when Velayati criticized fellow candidate Saeed Jalili — who led Iran’s nuclear negotiating team — for a counter-productive diplomacy that failed to engage with the 5+1 Powers. Velayati said that had Jalili shown any skill, Iran would already have reached a settlement in its interests.

Raja asked in its headline, “How Have Velayati’s Theories in the Debates Regarding the Negotiations become Void?” It said the time had come to evaluate “historic claims…about the principles of negotiations”, as Iran had given up “all of its winning cards” by suspending enrichment of 20% uranium while the US-led sanctions continue.

The latest statements appear to set the Guards, hardline politicians like Jalili, and the Basij militia against not only the Government but also the Speaker of Parliament, Ali Larijani; the head of judiciary, Sadegh Larijani; and the head of Iran’s military, General Hassan Firouzh

Both Larijanis and Firouzabadi have praised the Iranian negotiators this week, saying the nuclear talks should continue and Iran’s rights were being defended.

Wednesday’s developments also point to a split in the Supreme Leader’s office. Former Foreign Minister Velayati and former Interior Minister Ali Akbar Nategh-Nouri back the negotiations, while other advisors believe that they have failed to defend the Islamic Republic’s interests.

According to well-placed sources, the Supreme Leader’s son Mojtaba is allied with the critics of the talks.

Asked if the Supreme Leader could contain the dispute, one of the sources replied:

Can Khamenei control the Revolutionary Guards? I don’t know.

(Hat-tip to Arash Karami of Al-Monitor for translations)

At 5th Attempt, Rouhani Gets Parliamentary Approval of Science Minister

President Rouhani won a domestic victory on Wednesday by finally getting Parliamentary approval of one of his nominees for Science, Technology, and Higher Education Minister.

The Majlis agreed to the appointment of Mohammad Farhadi, who has served in the Science and Health Ministries, after dismissing one Minister and rejecting three of Rouhani’s nominees in the past 15 months.

Rouhani appealed to the MPs on the floor of Parliament:

Farhadi is a revolutionary veteran and has served the people and the revolution…. Our universities must be a center for knowledge and diplomacy and not a platform for different political factions.

Hard-line MPs have challenged the Government over universities, calling for their “Islamicization” and denouncing the reinstatement of students and professors who were expelled and fired after the disputed 2009 Presidential election.

Rouhani Visits Family of Assassinated Nuclear Scientist to Proclaim Iran’s Victory

Amid the regime’s in-fighting over the nuclear talks, President Rouhani visited the family of an assassinated scientist in Iran’s program on Wednesday.

Rouhani used the meeting with the relatives of Majid Shahriari as a prominent nuclear scientist to proclaim Iran’s self-sufficiency, despite the failure to reach a comprehensive agreement, and to defy the Islamic Republic’s unnamed foes:

The enemy had deliberately targeted these significant figures to drive our scientists away from the nuclear path and force them to surrender. But our youth today are pursuing this path more determined than ever.

Rouhani claims that, in the Vienna talks that ended on Monday, “we managed to take a step forward to fulfill the rights of Iranian people”:

They had refused to provide us with this technology. However, the measures taken over these past twenty years have shown Iran’s will to obtain this technology on its own. We have paid a lot to be where we are right now, and we must endeavor to reduce the costs and proceed in the path of our country’s scientific development.