Secret Meeting Between NYC Official and Iranian UN Ambassador Canceled After US State Department Intervention
A planned secret meeting this week between a senior New York City official and Iran's ambassador to the United Nations was canceled following intervention by the U.S. State Department. Anna Maria Archila, the city's Commissioner for International Affairs and a close associate of Mayor Zoran Mamdani, was scheduled to meet with Iranian UN Ambassador Amir Saeed Iravani on Tuesday at 2 United Nations Plaza in Manhattan. Two additional senior officials from the Mayor's Office for International Affairs were also expected to attend.
The State Department was not informed in advance about the meeting. A government source said State Department representatives contacted New York City officials to "clarify acceptable conduct," leading to the meeting's cancellation. It was also reported that Mayor Mamdani was unaware of the planned meeting until after it was arranged. An insider familiar with the Mayor's Office said Archila did not notify the mayor, and upon learning of the plan, she was reprimanded and instructed to cancel the meeting.
A spokesperson for the Mayor's Office for International Affairs confirmed, "This meeting did not and will not take place." The Iranian UN mission did not respond to requests for comment. Critics of Archila's handling of the situation told the New York Post she arranged the meeting without consulting anyone. Another source referenced the timing amid heightened tensions between Washington and Tehran, noting, "Read the room, people. I'm sure the president is excited."
The meeting was reportedly planned against the backdrop of escalating tensions between the U.S. and Iran, following Iranian attacks on commercial ships in the Strait of Hormuz and renewed mutual strikes. One day after the scheduled meeting date, President Donald Trump announced that a temporary ceasefire had ended.
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