Iran answered President Aoun's CNN accusation on three fronts on 6 June, the day after the interview aired. Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi wrote on X that Israel, not Iran, occupies Lebanon, and that "had Lebanon been a bargaining chip for Iran, we would have reached a deal long ago". Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei said Aoun "sells those who stand beside Lebanon". The Supreme Leader's veteran foreign-affairs adviser Ali Akbar Velayati warned that "diplomatic naivety carries a heavy cost", aimed at Aoun's push to disarm Hezbollah on Israeli promises 1. These remarks are statements of position rather than adjudicated findings.
Araghchi, his spokesman and the Leader's own adviser all moved on the same day, the speed Tehran reserves for a charge that lands. Three of its most senior voices answering a single CNN interview marks the rebuke as deliberate, not routine.
The substance reveals the stake. Araghchi's denial defends the coupling of Lebanon to the Iran-US MOU (memorandum of understanding) that he himself built ; Velayati's warning targets disarmament, the one outcome that would strip Iran of its Lebanese card. The rebuttals work to keep Lebanon attached to the nuclear file Tehran is negotiating, more than to settle whether Aoun told the truth.
