Iran seeks 'authentic' bilateral US nuclear talks
BBC News online - 3 February 2013
Iran
says it welcomes a US offer of bilateral nuclear talks, but wants the
US to show an "authentic... fair and real intention to resolve the
issue".
He was speaking at a security conference in Germany a day after Vice-President Joe Biden told the gathering Iran had to be "serious" on the issue.
International talks on Iran's nuclear programme are due later this month.
Iran is under an array of UN-imposed sanctions. Western countries suspect it wants to develop nuclear weapons, but Tehran says its nuclear programme is for energy generation and research.
Three days ago, the US warned Iran that its plans to upgrade uranium enrichment centrifuges at the Natanz plant would be a "further escalation" of the stand-off.
Analysis
Iran's Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi seemed positive about a new round of nuclear diplomacy but his remarks gave little hint as to whether this would prove any more successful than previous talks in reaching a deal between Tehran and the international community.
Mr Salehi was conciliatory but also tough. Iran, he said, was an important regional player. It was no longer a lackey of any superpower. But he was positive on the new round of talks and positive too on overtures from the US administration.
Nonetheless Mr Salehi fiercely defended Iran's right to develop its nuclear programme.
Mr Biden told the Munich Security Conference
that Washington was prepared to hold bilateral talks with Iran "when
the Iranian leadership, Supreme Leader [Ayatollah Ali Khamenei], is
serious".
"That offer stands, but it must be real and tangible and
there has to be an agenda that they are prepared to speak to. We are not
just prepared to do it for the exercise."Responding on Sunday, Mr Salehi said Iran had no "red lines" - that it had negotiated with the US bilaterally in Baghdad "a number of times".
"But we have to make sure ... that the other side comes with authentic intentions with a fair and real intention to resolve the issue," he said.
The minister said Iran would take the offer into "serious consideration", but the US had to desist from the "threatening rhetoric that everything is on the table".
Mr Salehi also described as "good news" that international talks on Iran were to be held in Kazakhstan on 25 February. He did not confirm if Iran would attend.
The five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany have held a series of negotiations over the years - but there has been no breakthrough.
Labels: Communications, Controversy, Iran, Nuclear Technology, Societal Failures, United Nations, United States
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