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Iran's Khamenei hails Obama's damping down war talk
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) March 8, 2012

Netanyahu reiterates objection to Iran nuclear arms
Jerusalem (AFP) March 8, 2012 - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reiterated on Thursday that Israel will not tolerate a nuclear-armed Iran, after returning from White House talks centred on Tehran's nuclear programme.

"We cannot accept that Iran has nuclear weapons because that would represent a danger to the existence of our country," the premier said in an interview on private Channel 10 television.

"We have the right, but also the duty to defend ourselves."

The West and Israel believe that Tehran's nuclear programme is aimed at acquiring an atomic bomb, but Iran insists its activities are peaceful.

Asked if he were prepared to let international sanctions against Iran work before attacking Iran, he replied: "I don't operate with a stop watch in my hand."

"We would be very happy if everything were resolved in a peace fashion, if Iran renounced its nuclear programme, dismantled its installations, especially in Qoms, and stopped enriching uranium," he said.

"If the sanctions work, all the better, but we don't know."

Netanyahu, who met with President Barack Obama on Monday and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Tuesday, put the world on notice that his patience was wearing thin and, if necessary, he would launch unilateral strikes.

Obama, who assured Netanyahu that he has Israel's "back", stressed that he sees a window for diplomacy with Iran, despite rampant speculation that Israel could soon mount a risky go-it-alone military operation.

The Obama administration says it does not believe Iran has taken a decision to develop a nuclear weapon, or that the time is right for military action, preferring to give biting new sanctions time to work.

But Israel claims that Iran may be on the cusp of "breakout" capability -- when it could quickly build a nuclear weapon.


Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Thursday welcomed comments by US President Barack Obama damping down talk of war against Tehran over its controversial nuclear drive.

"This talk is good talk and shows an exit from illusion," Khamenei's website quoted the leader as telling clerics from the Assembly of Experts, the 86-member body which selects the supreme leader, supervises his activities and can dismiss him.

Obama on Tuesday said that Iran's nuclear programme was not an immediate threat, arguing a "window" for diplomacy could forestall an Iranian bomb, while slamming Republican candidates for their hawkish statements demanding military action against the Islamic republic.

"But the US president continued saying that he wants to make the Iranian people kneel through sanctions, this part of this speech shows the continuation of illusion on this issue," Khamenei added.

Obama stole some of the political limelight from Republican presidential hopefuls by holding his first White House news conference in five months as voters went to the polls in the 10-state primary bonanza dubbed Super Tuesday.

Obama slammed Republicans for "big talk" and "bluster" and failing to consider the costs of war with Iran.

His remarks came a day after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he could not wait "much longer" for diplomacy on Iran to work.

Western governments and Iran's regional arch-rival Israel suspect that Tehran is seeking an atomic weapons capability under the guise of what it insists is a civilian nuclear programme.

The UN Security Council has slapped four sets of sanctions on Iran over its failure to heed repeated ultimatums to suspend uranium enrichment, the most controversial aspect of its nuclear programme.

The European Union and the United States have imposed further, unilateral sanctions aimed at crippling Iran's oil and financial sectors.

"The continuation of this illusion (that sanctions might deter Iran from pursuing its nuclear programme) will hurt the American officials and will lead their calculations to defeat," Khamenei said.

His comments come as long-stalled talks between the major powers and Iran on its nuclear programme are poised to resume.

The so-called P5+1 group of Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States plus Germany called on Iran on Thursday to enter into a "serious dialogue" and "without pre-conditions."

"We call on Iran to enter, without pre-conditions, into a sustained process of serious dialogue, which will produce concrete results," a joint statement said.

They said their readiness to resume negotiations was "on the understanding that these talks will address the international community's longstanding concerns and that there will be serious discussions on concrete confidence building measures."

The P5+1's negotiator, EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton, announced on Tuesday that the powers were ready to resume talks with Iran, but said the date and the venue still had to be agreed.

The last round of talks -- in Istanbul in January 2011 -- broke down over Iran's insistence on discussing "preconditions" before beginning full-blown negotiations on the nuclear dispute, Western diplomats said.

On Wednesday, the speaker of the Iranian parliament, Ali Larijani, warned the new talks would fail too if the major powers resorted to "pressure".

"They (the powers) should pay attention that if they want to continue pressure in the talks, it will achieve nothing," Larijani said.

World powers want 'serious dialogue' with Iran
Vienna (AFP) March 8, 2012 - World powers said Thursday that mooted talks with Iran must be "serious" and urged Tehran to allow UN inspectors access to a military base thought to be central to its suspected nuclear weapons drive.

"We call on Iran to enter, without preconditions, into a sustained process of serious dialogue, which will produce concrete results," said a statement from the United States, China, Russia, France, Britain and Germany, known as the P5+1.

They added that their readiness to negotiate was "on the understanding that these talks will address the international community's long-standing concerns and that there will be serious discussions on concrete confidence building measures."

The statement at a closed-door regular board meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency, came two days after EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said on behalf of the P5+1 that they were ready for talks with Iran.

Ashton said she did not want to "repeat the experience of Istanbul", referring to the last talks 14 months ago in the Turkish city, which broke down over Iranian demands to discuss "preconditions", according to Western envoys.

No date or location have been agreed but Washington's envoy Robert Wood to the IAEA told reporters Thursday he expected the talks to happen "in the coming few months."

Iran's envoy to the IAEA, Ali Asghar Soltanieh, declined to be drawn meanwhile on what concessions Iran might be prepared to make in the upcoming talks.

Tehran's willingness to discuss with the IAEA allegations of a nuclear weapons programme "by itself is confidence building," he told reporters.

"We will never suspend our nuclear activities, and we will continue (with them), under the supervision of course of the IAEA," he said.

The possible resumption comes despite an apparent deadlock between the IAEA and Iran after two fruitless visits to Tehran led by chief inspector Herman Nackaerts in January and February.

The visits saw Iran again reject a major IAEA report in November outlining a host of suspicious nuclear activities and deny access to the Parchin military site where explosives testing for warhead research allegedly took place.

Thursday's P5+1 statement urged Iran to "fulfil its undertaking to grant access to Parchin."

Amano on Monday appeared to allege that Iran was removing evidence at the base, saying "activities" spotted by satellite "makes us believe that going there sooner is better than later."

Iran says the IAEA already visited Parchin near Tehran in 2005 and that it is under no obligation to allow access because the site is non-nuclear.

Nackaerts said that since 2005 "we have acquired new information -- from satellite imagery -- from which we have been able to identify the precise location where we believe an explosive chamber is situated."

Iran is highly sensitive about allowing access to military sites following a large explosion at the Bid Ganeh base in November and multiple assassinations of nuclear scientists it has blamed on Israel and the United States.

"The agency heard a lot of excuses from Iran," Wood, the US envoy, said Thursday. "When you have these reports about a possible clean-up going on, and the fact that the agency has been denied access, makes you wonder."

Soltanieh said allegations of "sanitization" of the site were "a childish (and) ridiculous story made out of nothing," describing Parchin as "one minor issue" in its negotiations with the IAEA, which he said were ongoing.

"Unfortunately Western countries are not telling the truth ... The truth is that Iran is not pursuing nuclear weapons," with sanctions having "no effect whatsoever" on Iran's nuclear activities, including enrichment, he said.

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US demands 'actions' from Iran in nuclear talks
Washington (AFP) March 7, 2012 - The United States Wednesday rebuffed an Iranian warning that new nuclear talks would fail if they were used to exert pressure, demanding assurances Tehran was not building an atomic bomb.

"We will demand that Iran live up to its international obligations -- that it provide verifiable assurances it is not pursuing a nuclear weapon," White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters aboard Air Force One.

The warning came after Iranian parliamentary speaker Ali Larijani warned that the talks offered by the United States, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany would fail if they were used to "pressure" Tehran.

Carney said the United States was "clear-eyed" about its approach, given that Tehran declined to discuss its nuclear program in previous rounds of talks.

"We will not relent in our efforts through sanctions and other measures to isolate and pressure Iran," he said.

"Actions are what matter here, and we will judge Iran by its actions."

On Tuesday, European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, who represents the world powers, said she hoped for real progress in the talks at a time and place yet to be announced.

President Barack Obama meanwhile said he expected it would "quickly" become clear if Iran was serious about easing concerns about its nuclear intentions in the talks.

In a February 14 letter to Ashton, Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili said Tehran was ready to resume the deadlocked negotiations at the "earliest" opportunity as long as the world powers respected its right to peaceful atomic energy.

At the last talks between the two sides held in Istanbul in January 2011, Iran refused to address questions on its nuclear program, laying down what diplomatic sources said were "pre-conditions" such as a lifting of sanctions.

The prospects of new talks come at a time of heightened tension between Iran and its regional arch-rival Israel, and as Tehran struggles under a punishing new range of US and European Union sanctions.

Western powers and Israel suspect Iran is seeking to build a nuclear bomb under the guise of a civilian atomic program, a charge consistently denied by Tehran, which says its nuclear drive is aimed for peaceful purposes.



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