Iran orders investigation into FM Zarif's leaked audio

President Rouhani wants perpetrators behind allegedly stolen recording of Foreign Minister Javad Zarif found as officials call "theft of documents a conspiracy against the government".

FM Zarif's leaked remarks sparked harsh criticism from conservative media and politicians, with the mention of slain general Qasem Soleimani hitting a nerve.
AFP

FM Zarif's leaked remarks sparked harsh criticism from conservative media and politicians, with the mention of slain general Qasem Soleimani hitting a nerve.

Iran's president has ordered a probe into the "conspiracy" of leaked audio in which the foreign minister said the military was too influential in diplomacy.

President Hassan Rouhani ordered the investigation to identify who leaked the "stolen" three-hour-long recording by top diplomat and Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, a government spokesman said on Tuesday.

The tape, which comes ahead of presidential elections in June, has dominated the discussion in the Islamic republic since its publication by media outlets outside Iran on Sunday.

"We believe this theft of documents is a conspiracy against the government, the system, the integrity of effective domestic institutions, and also against our national interests," government spokesman Ali Rabiei told reporters.

"The president has ordered the intelligence ministry to identify the agents of this conspiracy," he added.

The file was "stolen for clear reasons", he said, without elaborating further.

READ MORE: Iran's Zarif complains about Revolutionary Guard in leaked recording

Harsh criticism

Foreign Ministry spokesperson Saeed Khatibzadeh did not deny the authenticity of the recording but said on Monday that it was cut from a seven-hour interview that included "personal opinions".

Zarif did not comment on the controversy, but published on Tuesday a brief audio message on Instagram, saying "I believe you should not work for history ... I say that don't worry about history so much, but worry about God and the people".

He did not specify when he recorded this message.

The leaked remarks sparked harsh criticism from conservative media and politicians, with the mention of Iran's slain general Qassem Soleimani hitting a nerve.

Soleimani, considered one of the prominent architects of Iranian regional policy, was killed early last year in an American drone strike in Baghdad, ordered by former US president Donald Trump.

The leak and probe come ahead of presidential elections on June 18, which will see the moderate Rouhani step down after two terms in office and after conservatives fared well in parliamentary elections last year.

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'Character assassination' 

The ultra-conservativeVatan-e Emrooz newspaper published a large black and white picture of Zarif on its front page, with the headline "Despicable" written in red.

"Diplomacy must follow the path of increasing the system's power," it said, criticising Zarif's comments regarding the military.

It added that his stance confirmed that "America's constant demand about negotiating Iran's regional power and missile capabilities" stemmed from Iranian diplomats' "wishes and cooperation with this demand".

Javan daily said Soleimani was "physically assassinated (upon) the order of the most wretched creature of the world... America's president".

But Zarif had "assassinated (Soleimani's) character".

Zarif 'sacrificed like a simple pawn'

Ultra-conservative Kayhan daily inferred that the audio may have been leaked by Rouhani's government to force "Zarif into (political) suicide" in a bid to save itself from the judgement of "public opinion".

It said Zarif, while being "sacrificed like a simple pawn", had broken rules of "confidentiality" and provided Iran's enemies with "intelligence and ammunition" for their psychological war against the country.

For their part, the reformist papers sought to question which faction stood to gain from the leak.

Shargh daily on its front page wrote "Who leaked it, who benefited?"

READ MORE: Baghdad procession marks first anniversary of Soleimani's death

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