New Iran government scraps anti-Israeli conference

New Iran government scraps anti-Israeli conference

TEHRAN - The Associated Press

Iranian president Hassan Rouhani. AFP Photo

The administration of Iran's new President Hassan Rouhani has cancelled an anti-Israeli conference as part of his outreach to the West and efforts to map out a new diplomatic path for Iran.
 
The annual event was set up by Rouhani's predecessor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and showcased the former president's vitriolic anti-Israeli rhetoric and promoted his anti-Israeli sentiments.
 
When the conference was first held in 2005, Ahmadinejad made his infamous remark that Israel should be "wiped off the map." He later suggested that the Holocaust was a "myth."
 
Iranian news websites, including jahannews.com, said on Friday that the Foreign Ministry scrapped the gathering in Tehran because it was seen as undermining the government's policy of "interaction with the outside world."
 
Rouhani's overtures to the West - including the historic exchanges last month at the United Nations - appear to have solid backing from Iran's top decision-maker, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. As long as the supreme leader keeps his support, the backlash from critics cannot seriously reverse Rouhani's policies of easing tensions with the outside world.
 
Hard-liners accuse Rouhani of selling out on Iran's ideological values.
 
One of the organizers of the anti-Israeli conference, dubbed New Horizon, said the cancellation was a "disaster" and a "big mistake."
 
"Cancellation of the anti-Zionist New Horizon festival is a disaster. It was the most powerful anti-Zionist conference in Iran," website mashreghnews.ir quoted the organizer, Nader Talebzadeh, as saying.
 
Talebzadeh said 63 foreign scholars and 50 Iranian speakers were expected to address the gathering, which was supposed to have taken place either in late September or early October. He added that he began inviting foreign speakers back in May, when Ahmadinejad was in office.
 
Rouhani's short-term goal is seeking to ease Western sanctions as part of negotiations over Iran's controversial nuclear program. Talks with the U.S. and other world powers are scheduled to resume in Geneva next week, but Iran has not yet given details on what new proposals it would bring.
 
The West and its allies fear Iran's ability to make nuclear fuel will eventually lead to weapons-grade material. Iran repeatedly denies it seeks nuclear weapons and says its atomic program is only for energy and medical applications.
 
Israel views a nuclear-armed Iran as a threat to its very existence, citing Iran's repeated calls for Israel's destruction, its long-range missile program and its support for violent anti-Israel groups like the Hezbollah in Lebanon.