Key issues include criticism of the government by some of the country's top former Iranian diplomats, a deal to publish the memoirs of former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and the prospects for the future of Russia's war in Ukraine. British newspaper.


We begin with a report by The Guardian and Foreign Affairs editor Patrick Wintour, titled "Ex-Iran diplomat speaks out against regime".


Several former senior Iranian diplomats are staunch critics of their government and warn that Iran's failure to revive the nuclear deal and its deployment of drones to Russia in Ukraine could lead to isolation and economic weakness, the authors said. become


He added that the stark warning reflected the views of the old guard of reformist diplomats and called for tough battles within the government over strategy and policy.


Hamid Abu Talebi, a former EU envoy and political adviser to former President Hassan Rouhani, tweeted on Monday that "Iran's foreign policy is in the hands of extremists," he said.


According to the author, the harshest criticism came from the former head of the European Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Mohammad al-Sadr, who remains a member of the Expediency Council, which is the Supreme Leader's main advisory body.


In a front-page interview with the Etihad newspaper, the president expressed concern that Iran had missed a "golden opportunity" to revive the nuclear deal and said the country had abandoned its neutrality in Ukraine, which Tehran has called the United Nations. The United States faced accusations of war crimes. expenses. Aircraft supply. March was used against Ukrainian civilians


In November, a group of 36 retired diplomats signed a joint statement claiming that serious mistakes in Iran's foreign policy had dire domestic consequences, the authors said. He asked the leaders of the country to listen to the voice of the youth and if Iran plays a dangerous game by sending weapons to Russia, he expressed concern about Iran's moral position.