The Iranian press today rounded on France and its top diplomat Laurent Fabius, after reports emerged he scuttled a deal in nuclear negotiations in Geneva at the weekend.
"France ruined its image in Geneva," where talks between Iran and world powers sunk after Fabius expressed dissatisfaction with a draft text of an agreement, the English-language Tehran Times said.
According to the government-run Iran daily, Iranian businessmen have decided to "review their relations" with their French counterparts and find "a more trustworthy partner."
More From This Section
It quoted economist Moussa Ghaninejad as saying there will be consequences for France's actions in Geneva.
"The normalisation of relations with the West will happen sooner or later, and France sabotaging the negotiations will certainly come back to haunt it then," Ghaninejad said.
The reformist daily Etemad in an editorial titled the "non-diplomatic attitude of France" agreed, saying: "Should there be an agreement, France will certainly be the losing party."
Iran's chief nuclear negotiator and foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, has refrained from naming France as the party preventing an agreement.
"It was possible to reach an agreement with most of the members of (world powers) but ... One of the delegations had a little problem, he said on his Facebook page.
"Mr Fabius, we will not forget," wrote the Haft-e-Sobh daily, claiming that Internet-savvy Iranians had stormed his Facebook page.
Quoting a post in Persian on his page, the daily wrote: "Iranians will not forget your animosity. Apparently, you have become the puppet of Israel and Saudi Arabia and you have satisfied hardline Iranians."
"Fabius has supported Israel and let the Iranians become subject of sanctions that deny us medicine and food products," it quoted another post.