
Iran State TV Cuts Ghalibaf Interview, Exposing Post-Khamenei Power Struggle
The abrupt censorship of a recorded interview with parliament speaker and chief negotiator Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf has laid bare factional infighting over nuclear diplomacy and the succession of the late supreme leader.
Iran’s state broadcaster IRIB interrupted a pre-recorded interview with parliament speaker and lead nuclear negotiator Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf midway through its Tuesday broadcast, triggering an immediate public protest from the legislature’s media centre. The centre stated the interview had been delivered more than two hours before airtime and that IRIB had a duty to coordinate any cuts. The broadcaster responded that the programme had been divided into two parts, with the second segment scheduled for Wednesday evening.
According to the parliamentary statement, the excised portions covered International Atomic Energy Agency inspections, the country’s frozen assets, and a $300 billion reconstruction credit. Iranian media reported that the cut occurred as Ghalibaf was detailing the previous Raisi government’s failed attempt to transfer $6 billion in blocked funds from South Korea to Qatar for humanitarian goods, and as he prepared to address what he called “Trump’s lies” and a “strategic message” from the new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei. In the aired section, Ghalibaf defended the memorandum of understanding with Washington, asserting it had enabled Iran to export more than 40 million barrels of oil after a blockade was lifted, compared with zero in the preceding fifty to sixty days.
Viewed from Tehran, the incident illuminates an intensifying factional battle over the terms of engagement with the United States in the wake of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s death. Analysts in the capital note that IRIB’s leadership is dominated by figures close to ultra-conservative former negotiator Saeed Jalili and the Stability Front, who oppose the current diplomatic track. The selective censorship—the same broadcaster recently aired a live speech by a hardline MP without interruption—signals that the struggle is now being waged through control of the state media. Reformist-leaning outlets described the move as a “new innovation” of the Jalili-aligned television management, while conservative news sites argued it proved a single political faction holds sway over the main arteries of the state broadcaster.
The public clash comes as Mojtaba Khamenei consolidates his authority. Iran International, citing sources inside the country, reported that the new leader intends to replace judiciary chief Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei at the end of his first term, breaking with the tradition of two-term tenures, as part of a broader post-war rearrangement of power. The nuclear dossier and the fate of enriched uranium stockpiles remain deeply contested. On the eve of Ali Khamenei’s funeral, some Iranian commentators have sharply criticised both sides for dragging internal disputes into the public arena at a moment of national transition. The second part of the interview is expected to air, but the parliamentary media centre has not confirmed whether the cut material will be restored, leaving the dossier open as the next round of technical talks with the US delegation in Switzerland approaches.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 1 languages
The state TV's decision to cut a pre-recorded interview with Ghalibaf, while airing a live speech by a hardliner, exposes internal contradictions and raises questions about media management. At a sensitive historical juncture, the choice was made to bring divisions to the surface rather than resolve them behind the scenes.
The incident highlights deepening fractures within Iran's ruling establishment over negotiations with the United States. The abrupt cutting of the parliament speaker's interview sparked criticism and made the regime's internal power struggles more visible.
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