Iran's top leader said Saturday that some aspects of Hassan Rouhani's 
trip to New York last month were "not appropriate," but reiterated his 
crucial support for the president's policy of outreach to the West.
The comments by Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, summarized Saturday on his 
website khamenei.ir, came after hard-liners criticized a 15-minute phone
 conversation between Rouhani and U.S. President Barack Obama, a gesture
 aimed at ending three decades of estrangement between the two 
countries.
Hard-liners, including commanders in the powerful Revolutionary Guard, 
have said the president went too far in reaching out to the U.S.
Khamenei also said the U.S. was not "trustworthy." He has previously 
said he's not opposed to direct talks with the U.S. to resolve Iran's 
nuclear standoff with the West but is not optimistic.
"We support the government's diplomatic moves including the New York 
trip because we have faith (in them)," Khamenei said. "But some of what 
happened in the New York trip was not appropriate."
"We are skeptical of Americans and have no trust in them at all. The 
American government is untrustworthy, arrogant, illogical and a 
promise-breaker. It's a government captured by the international Zionism
 network," said Khamenei, who has final say on all matters of state.
Rouhani's outreach has received broad support from Iranian legislators 
and it appears popular, but some including the Guard appear rattled by 
the pace of developments.
The Guard chief commander, Gen. Mohammad Ali Jafari, praised Rouhani 
recently but called the phone call a "tactical mistake" and said he 
should have avoided it.
"The respected president, who adopted a powerful and appropriate 
position in the trip ... would have been better off avoiding the 
telephone conversation with Obama — in the same way he didn't give time 
for a meeting with Obama — and left such measures until after practical,
 verifiable steps by the U.S. government and a test of their good will,"
 he said in an interview earlier this week.
The Guard is one of the few institutions capable of standing up and 
pushing to reverse course and acting as a spoiler if it sees Rouhani 
going too far and too fast.
Iran is at loggerheads with the U.S. over its disputed nuclear program, 
which the West says aims at developing weapons technology. Iran says its
 program is for peaceful purposes.
 
 
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