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Donald Trump’s victory sparks optimism in an unlikely place: Iran

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Donald Trump had sharp words for Iran during his presidential campaign, but Iranian leaders see reasons for hope in a Trump presidency.

For hard-liners, Trump’s threats to revisit the nuclear deal, which Iran struck with six world powers including the United States, bolsters their constant refrain that Washington cannot be trusted.

Meanwhile, moderate President Hassan Rouhani and his allies are playing down concerns over Trump’s rhetoric. Some quietly express optimism that the real estate tycoon would be open to negotiations in other areas dividing Washington and Tehran. Some U.S. sanctions remain in place against Iran because of its support for militant groups and over its ballistic missile program.

“President Rouhani is adapting his government to the new president-elect, and everybody here is betting on the flexibility of President Trump when he begins steering America in January,” said Nader Karimi Juni, an independent political analyst.

As a candidate, Trump frequently denounced the nuclear deal, a signature foreign policy achievement of the Obama administration that went into effect in January. Iran agreed to significant restrictions on its nuclear program – which Western officials feared could be used to produce a bomb, though Tehran says it is only for civilian purposes – in exchange for an easing of economic sanctions.

Trump termed the deal “disastrous” for conceding too much to Iran and said it would be one of the first things he would renegotiate as president. Iran has shown no willingness to reopen talks on an agreement that has reduced its diplomatic isolation and opened the way to fresh foreign investment, although it has failed to bring about the sweeping economic improvements Rouhani promised.

Trump also drew criticism in Iran for saying that Iranian ships that provoked the United States would be “shot out of the water,” a reference to Iran’s brief detention of 10 American sailors who veered into Iranian waters in January.

A frame grab from the state-run IRIB News Agency shows U.S. Navy boats in the custody of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard in the Persian Gulf on Jan. 12, 2016. The boats and 10 American sailors were taken into custody after Iran said they drifted into territorial waters. Both the boats and sailors were released shortly after their capture.
A frame grab from the state-run IRIB News Agency shows U.S. Navy boats in the custody of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard in the Persian Gulf on Jan. 12, 2016. The boats and 10 American sailors were taken into custody after Iran said they drifted into territorial waters. Both the boats and sailors were released shortly after their capture.

In remarks on Wednesday, Iranian leaders said Trump’s election would not have an impact on their policies.

Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Iran was “not worried” about a Trump presidency because it would be no different from previous U.S. administrations.

“Over the past 37 years, any major U.S. party that came to power brought us no good,” Khamenei said in remarks broadcast on state television. “Their evil was always directed toward the Iranian nation.”

Iran and the United States have had no diplomatic relations since 1979, when militant students stormed the U.S. Embassy in Tehran and took hostages in retaliation for Washington’s refusal to hand over ousted monarch Mohammed Reza Shah Pahlavi.

Rouhani, in a speech broadcast on state TV, did not mention Trump by name but said a change in presidents “has no impact on the will of Iran.”

While Trump’s campaign unsettled some Iranians, others said he and Iranian leaders would have room to compromise.

Trump has signaled he would seek greater cooperation with Russia in the fight against Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. That is one area where he would find common ground with Iranian hard-liners, who back Syrian President Bashar Assad in the battle against Islamic State, also known by the Arabic acronym Daesh.

A building bearing anti-US graffiti in the Iranian capital of Tehran on Nov. 9, 2016. Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani said there was “no possibility” of its nuclear deal with world powers being overturned by President-elect Donald Trump, despite his fervent threat to rip it up.

“If Trump proves to be anti-Daesh enough, and allies with Russia and the Syrian regime against Daesh, there will be more scope for negotiation between Iran and America,” Bahman Eshghi, secretary general of the Tehran Chamber of Commerce, said in an interview.

Others hoped that Trump would be more like President Reagan, whose administration covertly sold weapons to Iran to use in its decade-long war with Iraq, in what became known as the Iran-Contra scandal.

“Our experience shows that President Reagan was more helpful to Iran during the war with Iraq,” said Juni, the analyst. “I think Trump might do some good business with Iran despite both sides keeping up their hostile rhetoric against each other.”

But three top names on the short list for Trump’s Cabinet are worrisome to Iranian officials: Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, former New York Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani and ex-U.N. Ambassador John Bolton are outspoken supporters of the Mujahedin Khalq, an Iranian dissident group in exile that Tehran regards as a terrorist organization.

“All three – Gingrich, Bolton and Giuliani – are subversive against the Iranian regime,” said Hojjat Kalashi, a secular analyst.

Special correspondent Mostaghim reported from Tehran and staff writer Bengali from Mumbai, India.

shashank.bengali@latimes.com

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