Iran selects new head of body in charge of ‘Supreme Leader’ position/Hillary Clinton blasts Senate Republicans over Iran nuclear letter

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Hillary Clinton blasts Senate Republicans over Iran nuclear letter
By REUTERS/03/11/2015/Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Tuesday excoriated Republican senators for their letter warning Iran against a nuclear deal with President Barack Obama, saying they either were trying to help Tehran or harm the US commander-in-chief. Monday’s open letter to Iran’s leaders, signed by 47 Republican senators, sparked a political firestorm. Vice President Joe Biden also sharply criticized the lawmakers while three potential 2016 Republican presidential candidates, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal, former Texas Governor Rick Perry and former Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum, threw their support behind the letter. Clinton, a likely Democratic presidential candidate, said the Obama administration is in the midst of intense negotiations for a diplomatic solution to close off Iran’s pathway to a nuclear bomb and provide unprecedented access to its nuclear program. “And one has to ask, what was the purpose of this letter?” Clinton said in an appearance at the United Nations. “There appear to be two logical answers. Either these senators were trying to be helpful to the Iranians or harmful to the commander-in-chief in the midst of high-stakes international diplomacy. Either answer does discredit to the letters’ signatories,” Clinton added. Biden said in a statement on Monday night the letter was “expressly designed to undercut a sitting president in the midst of sensitive international negotiations” and was “beneath the dignity” of the Senate. “This letter, in the guise of a constitutional lesson, ignores two centuries of precedent and threatens to undermine the ability of any future American president, whether Democrat or Republican, to negotiate with other nations on behalf of the United States,” Biden wrote. Biden said he could not recall another instance in which senators wrote such a letter to advise another country, much less a longtime adversary. In the letter, the Republicans told Iran’s leaders any nuclear deal with Obama could last only while he remains in office. Senator Tom Cotton, who spearheaded the letter, on Tuesday defended it and questioned Biden’s foreign policy wisdom. “The only thing unprecedented is an American president negotiating a nuclear weapons deal with the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism without seeking congressional approval at the end of that deal,” Cotton told CNN. Jindal said on Twitter that anyone thinking of running for president from either party should sign the letter to make clear Iran is negotiating with a “lame duck” president. Jindal said Biden owes an apology to Cotton, a first-term senator from Arkansas who served in the Army in Iraq and Afghanistan. “He wore the boots in Iraq. He’s earned our attention, not your insults,” Jindal said. Many Republicans contend Obama is so eager for a nuclear deal that he would sign off on an agreement leaving Iran able to easily make a nuclear weapon. World powers and Iran are trying to reach a framework agreement this month and a final deal by June to curb Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for easing sanctions. Iran says the program is for peaceful purposes only.

Iran selects new head of body in charge of ‘Supreme Leader’ position
By JPOST.COM STAFF/03/10/2015/Iran has selected a new figure to head its national Assembly of Experts, a body that governs the tenure of the Supreme leader, state news agency FARS reported on Tuesday. Ayatollah Mohammad Yazdi, a cleric who had served as the head of Iran’s Judiciary branch between 1989 and 1999, was among other candidates considered for the position, both of whom are senior clerics in the Islamic Republic’s regime and hold the title of Ayatollah. Yazdi’s selection to this new position comes in light of reports that the current Supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, who suffers from stage four prostate cancer, was hospitalized last week after his health began deteriorating rapidly. Last week, western experts observing the top cleric’s medical condition from afar suggested that Khamenei’s disease has reached terminal levels and that he has about two years to live, an assertion that Tehran denies vehemently, regarding such postulations as “Israeli driven lies” and refuting them by showcasing the Supreme Leader’s apparent recent attendance of a meeting with environmentalists this week in order to address the issue of Iran’s natural resources. “He carries about his work very normally. His business is as usual, work as usual,” said Mohammad Marandi, the Ayatollah’s chief surgeon. Iran has been fending off accusations that Khamenei is on his death-bed amid foreign speculation of who might replace him. The country, an Islamic Republic at whose helm is an Islamic scholar who prescribes law according to his expertise, would be left with a gap in its leadership if the current leader were to die without a clear replacement. Such a development would create a difficult situation at a time when Iran is vying for regional and international influence. Tehran is currently involved in the fight against both the Islamic State group in Iraq and anti-Assad rebel forces, including the al-Qaida affiliated Jabhat al-Nusra, in Syria. Meanwhile, it has also been engaged in a diplomatic process with the United States aimed at reaching a deal concerning its nuclear energy program, which many countries, including Israel, consider to be covertly geared toward developing a nuclear weapon.