Dec 17, 2019

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani took off from Tehran Dec. 17 to visit Malaysia and Japan in what is seen as a major diplomatic push to save an economy severely battered by US sanctions. Rouhani will be in the Malaysian capital for the high-profile Kuala Lumpur Summit 2019 on international development.

But it is the second leg of his trip, taking him to Tokyo, that has grabbed media attention. The Iranian president will meet with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe Dec. 20 in a highly anticipated summit expected to revolve around Japan-led mediation between Tehran and Washington.

Ahead of his departure from Tehran, Rouhani appeared cautious, refusing to refer to mediation as a key agenda point. "The US tyrannical pressure and illegal sanctions will not sustain," he told reporters, adding, "World nations are seeking close and good ties with Iran."

In the runup to the trip, Rouhani administration officials have maintained a more or less diplomatic tone or even, at times, a line of denial. "The Japan visit has nothing to do with such issues as negotiations with the United States," government spokesman Ali Rabiei said at a briefing in Tehran Dec. 16. Yet he noted that Iran "takes into serious consideration" mediation efforts by "our Japanese friends."

Addressing a Japan-Iran trade panel in Tehran Dec. 16, Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi — the man who delivered Rouhani's message to the Japanese premier in Tokyo earlier this month — cited Abe's June visit to Tehran as a manifestation of Japan's "courage and prudence" in maintaining ties with the Islamic Republic. Abe's mission to establish a connection between Tehran and Washington, nonetheless, yielded no tangible results.