Rosen posed the question based on a tip he had received that direct secret talks between Washington and Tehran were taking place over Iran's nuclear program. Psaki's predecessor, former State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland had earlier denied that any one-on-one negotiations outside the international P5+1 group were under way.
Rosen's question, and Psaki's response, that "there are times where diplomacy needs privacy in order to progress," was curiously edited out of the 2013 clip found on the State Department's website. The agency later blamed the disappearance on a 'glitch', and said that it had been restored in full following a complaint by Fox.
The journalist said he noticed the missing question when doing a report on an interview given by Obama administration Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes to The New York Times Magazine. In the interview, the official candidly admitted misleading US Congress and the media on the timeline of negotiations with Iran.
The talks, Rhodes said, began in mid-2012, before US presidential elections, and before moderate Iranian President Hassan Rouhani came to power. The story about talks intensifying in 2013, he added, "was largely manufactured for the purpose of selling the deal."
'Legacy Concerns'
Speaking to Sputnik Persian about the odd incident, Emad Abshenass, editor in chief of the Iran Press newspaper, suggested that it was obvious to him that this was an attempt by President Barack Obama to preserve his legacy.
"For the United States, and for the Obama administration in particular, the issue of implementing the Joint Compressive Plan of Action (JCPA) on the Iran nuclear program is perhaps even more important than it is for Iran," the journalist noted. "After all, Mr. Obama sought to see to it that it was during his presidency that such a historical step – an agreement with Iran, took place."
In fact, the journalist said, "the pressure is so high that it has even become a subject of discussion by the Congress. In this regard, the US government chose to remove such comments, so that they would not once again become a pretext for a new scandal in the eyes of the public." The attempt seems to have failed.