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Originally published Sunday, March 22, 2009 at 12:00 AM

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Iran's Khamenei rebuffs Obama tape

Iran's most powerful figure dismissed President Obama's extraordinary Persian New Year gesture, insisting Saturday that the U.S. administration's actions must match its rhetoric before Iran would alter its foreign policy, in an apparent attempt to keep the political establishment unified behind an anti-American posture.

Los Angeles Times

TEHRAN, Iran — Iran's most powerful figure dismissed President Obama's extraordinary Persian New Year gesture, insisting Saturday that the U.S. administration's actions must match its rhetoric before Iran would alter its foreign policy, in an apparent attempt to keep the political establishment unified behind an anti-American posture.

Supreme leader Ali Khamenei, who is Iran's highest spiritual, military and political authority, told supporters in his hometown of Mashhad that "changes in words" would not be enough to convince Iran that the Obama administration was sincere in its outlook.

"We do not have any record of the new U.S. president," he said in a live television broadcast. "We are observing, watching and judging. If you change, we will also change our behavior. If you do not change, we will be the same nation as 30 years ago."

The crowd chanted, "God is great! Khamenei is the leader!"

As he spoke, Khamenei glanced cursorily at his notes, suggesting that his words were carefully considered. His remarks were the most detailed and authoritative response by any Iranian leader to several attempts by the Obama administration to reach out to the Islamic Republic.

Obama issued a 3 ½-minute videotape early Friday morning congratulating Iranian people and officials on the occasion of the important holiday, acknowledging three decades of strained relations with America and offering a new beginning.

Iranian officials quickly responded by welcoming the address but voicing skepticism about its sincerity. On Saturday, Khamenei recited a list of alleged U.S. wrongdoings over the last three decades, including the 1988 downing of an Iranian civilian plane by a U.S. warship in the Persian Gulf, the freezing of Iranian assets and strong support for Israel and armed Iranian opposition groups.

"They are talking of extending a hand to Iran on the occasion of the New Year and they are congratulating the Iranian people," he said. "At the same time, they are accusing (Iran) of terrorism and the manufacturing of nuclear weapons."

Khamenei's quick, pointed response to Obama was unusual and appeared to be an attempt swiftly to silence any voices within Iran's divided political establishment that might be keen on responding genially to the New Year message.

Opposition to the U.S. and Israel remain a major pillar of the Islamic Republic's radical populist ideology, with "Death to America" a ubiquitous rallying cry and the accusation of being an American or Israeli dupe often used to tarnish opponents of the system.

Obama's friendly tone, personal ties to the Muslim world and immense popularity throughout Iran and the Middle East pose a unique challenge for a government that describes the United States as an unjust power bent on destroying Islam.

The U.S. and Iran went their separate ways after a 1979 revolution that overthrew the U.S.-backed monarch Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi and established the Islamic Republic. That year, radical Iranian students seized the U.S. Embassy in Tehran and held American employees hostage for 444 days, poisoning relations between the two former allies.

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Khamenei said that lifting economic sanctions and retracting "hostile propaganda" would be among the welcomed shifts in U.S. policies.

"For you to say that we will both talk to Iran and simultaneously exert pressure on her, both threats and appeasement, our nation hates this approach," he said.

Obama has said he is committed to improving America's image abroad after what most analysts consider a sullying of the U.S. reputation in the wake of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and abuses of detainees in the Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo Bay prisons in Iraq and Cuba, respectively.

To improve America's standing abroad, Khamenei advised Obama, "avoid an arrogant tone, avoid arrogant behavior, avoid bullying behavior, do not interfere in nations' affairs, be contented with your own share, do not define interests extraterritorially all over the world."

Copyright © 2009 The Seattle Times Company

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