Iran’s Supreme
Leader Backs U.S. Deal but Distances Himself from It
Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei distanced
himself from the agreement, putting responsibility for it on Iran’s president,
and said it does not mean acceding to U.S. demands.
Point Summary
·
Iran’s
Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, said he allowed the agreement with
the U.S. but does not support it in principle.
·
He
placed responsibility for the deal on Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, who
accepted accountability for its implementation.
·
Khamenei
said the agreement should not be seen as accepting U.S. demands.
·
He
emphasized that Iranian negotiators must not give in to any “excessive demands”
from the United States.
·
The
deal provides Iran with significant economic benefits while postponing
negotiations on its nuclear program.
·
Khamenei
praised Iranian diplomats but criticized U.S. President Donald Trump, claiming
the U.S. agreed to the deal out of desperation.
·
His
remarks suggest Iran’s broader foreign policy and support for regional allies
such as Hezbollah are unlikely to change.
·
Iranian
officials quickly echoed Khamenei’s position, stressing that any future
agreement must respect his “red lines.”
·
Parliament
Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf warned that Iran would respond forcefully if
faced with unacceptable demands.
·
The
statement indicates that future U.S.-Iran negotiations are likely to remain
difficult despite the current agreement.
[ABS News Service/20.06.2026]
Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, has distanced
himself from the agreement with the United States, and made clear that his
negotiators had little room to grant concessions to “the enemy.”
In his first public comments on the deal, in a statement issued
late Thursday, Mr. Khamenei said he had assented to the deal but he did not
agree with signing it, “as a matter of principle.” He did not elaborate. The
agreement grants Iran broad economic benefits while delaying negotiations on
its nuclear program for later.
Mr. Khamenei said he had authorized the agreement because Iran’s
president, Masoud Pezeshkian, had accepted responsibility for it and committed
to protect the rights of Iranians and the “resistance front,” likely a
reference to the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah, which is at war with
Israel.
“He has also stated explicitly that if the American side seeks
excessive demands, he will not submit to them,” Mr. Khamenei wrote, referring
to Mr. Pezeshkian.
Mr. Khamenei praised Iran’s diplomats and denigrated President
Trump, saying he had come to the agreement “out of desperation.”
In effect, Mr. Khamenei deflected responsibility for the agreement
onto Iran’s elected government. Iran has a hybrid system of government, with
some elected institutions that hold far less power than the theocratic elements
of the government, including the supreme leader, a cleric.
By referencing “excessive demands,” Mr. Khamenei is constraining
his diplomats’ ability to grant concessions at the negotiating table, although
what qualifies as “excessive” was not specified.
“It is obvious that the in-person negotiations that will take place
in the future do not mean accepting the enemy’s view,” he wrote.
Mr. Khamenei’s father and predecessor as supreme leader, Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei, often took a similar tack. He allowed Iranian diplomats to
conduct talks with the United States and world powers over the country’s
nuclear program, and endorsed the resulting deal in 2015, but then
publicly criticized its
implementation and downplayed his own involvement in it.
Mojtaba Khamenei’s message on Thursday signaled that the deal with
the United States would not lead to many more such agreements, Ali Afshari, a
former activist in Iran and now a political analyst living in the United
States, wrote on social media.
The message also suggested that the regime’s confrontational
foreign policy is unlikely to change, he said.
Soon after the message was released, senior Iranian officials
issued their own statements reacting to and expressing gratitude to Mr.
Khamenei. One member of an important Iranian consultative body said any agreement must observe Mr. Khamenei’s “red lines.”
Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, Iran’s Parliament speaker who has led
negotiations with the United States, thanked Mr. Khamenei and sought to
reassure him of the team’s approach, in a statement published on state media early on Friday.
“If the enemy seeks excessive demands along this path, we have
already proven that our hand remains on the trigger, and we have no hesitation
in delivering a crushing response to the enemy — one whose taste it has already
experienced in the recent war,” Mr. Ghalibaf wrote.