Pietersen, England's leading all-time run-scorer across all formats, has been in the international wilderness since the team returned from their 5-0 Ashes thrashing in Australia last year.
One of Strauss's first acts as the new England and Wales Cricket Board's director of cricket was to tell Pietersen, his predecessor as England captain, that a "massive trust issue" prevented him being recalled for this season's home internationals with New Zealand and Australia.
That appeared to contradict earlier comments from new ECB chairman Colin Graves that a return was possible if Pietersen scored enough runs in county cricket.
Strauss's first week in his new post also saw him sack England coach Peter Moores, but it was his take on Pietersen that provoked the greatest public criticism.
One subsequent report even went as far to say that England captain Alastair Cook would have quit international cricket had Pietersen, currently sidelined with a calf injury, been allowed back into the side.
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Meanwhile the new-ball pairing of James Anderson and Stuart Broad, who in Pietersen's autobiography were described as operating a "bullying culture" in the England dressing room, may well have not been thrilled by the prospect of again being in the same side as the South Africa-born shotmaker.
