[caption id="attachment_146885" align="alignright" width="184"] U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry (right) speaks with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif as they walk on a street in Geneva on January 14.[/caption]
In Iran, foreign policy heavyweight Sadegh Kharazi has come out in strong support of the countrys nuclear negotiating team. The head of the newly founded Reformist Voice of Iranians party, and former envoy to France, expressed his stance in a two-hourlive TV debatewith member of parliamentAlireza Zakani.
Kharazi is a nephew of former Foreign MinisterKamal Kharazi, who is now foreign policy adviser to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The younger Kharazi also has family ties to Ayatollah Khamenei; his sister is Khamenei's daughter-in-law. To Western audiences, Kharazi is perhaps best known as a key figure behind the fabled 2003 grand bargain proposal to the United States.
While the former Iranian envoy on occasion writes about the nuclear negotiations, this is the first time in years that he has appeared on national TV to directly confront conservatives.
Kharazi began the debate by arguing that Washington is not a monolith. He blamed what he referred to as the discrepancy between Americas words and deeds onCongress, Israel and Arab states. Yet, he argued that conflict with the United States wont come to an end, even if the nuclear issue is resolved.