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NUKEWARS
US, Iran gear for historic nuclear talks
by Staff Writers
United Nations, United States (AFP) Sept 26, 2013


Iran leader wants nuclear deal within months: report
Washington (AFP) Sept 25, 2013 - Iranian President Hassan Rouhani wants to reach an agreement over the country's nuclear program within three months and has full backing to broker a deal from the country's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, it was reported Wednesday.

In an interview with the Washington Post, Rouhani said he was keen to set a three or six-month timetable to seal a nuclear deal, emphasizing that Iran envisioned a process lasting "months not years."

"If we are on the issue of the nuclear file, we need resolution in a reasonable time," he told the Post.

"The only way forward is for a timeline to be inserted into the negotiations that's short -- and wrap it up. That is a decision of my government, that short is necessary to settle the nuclear file.

"If it's three months that would be Iran's choice, if it's six months that's still good. It's a question of months not years."

Asked if he had the backing of Khamenei to conclude a deal, Rouhani said "settlement of the nuclear file is one of the responsibilities of my government."

"My government is fully empowered to finalize the nuclear talks," he added.

The United States, other Western powers and Israel suspect Tehran is using its nuclear program as a cover to develop an atomic bomb, something Iran denies.

Rouhani's comments come after signs of improving relations between the United States and Iran following his election earlier this year. The Iranian leader, however, balked at meeting US President Barack Obama at the United Nations on Tuesday.

The first major test of several weeks of promising rhetoric between the foes will come on Thursday, as US Secretary of State John Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif join counterparts from Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia to discuss Iran's nuclear activities at the United Nations headquarters in New York.

Rouhani told the Post that Iran was willing to make its nuclear program "transparent" to assure the international community it was not seeking to build a bomb.

"If the West recognizes Iran's legal rights then there's really no hurdle in creating full transparency that's necessary to settle this case," he said.

Rouhani suggested that reaching agreement on Iran's nuclear program could be a gateway to an eventual normalization of ties with the United States. Washington broke off diplomatic relations with Iran in 1980 following the US Embassy hostage crisis in Tehran.

"If Mr Obama and I were to get together, we would both be looking at the future, and the prospects ahead and our hopes for that future," Rouhani said.

"The notes and letters and exchanges between us are in that direction, and they will continue. We need a beginning point. I think that is the nuclear issue."

With the eyes of the world upon them, the United States and Iran will Thursday have one of their highest-level meetings since the 1979 revolution as their foreign ministers join talks on Tehran's suspect nuclear program.

And while officials are saying that no bilateral talks are planned between US Secretary of State John Kerry and his Iranian counterpart Mohammad Javad Zarif, there remains the chance for a quick tete-a-tete in the corridor.

Zarif will be the first Iranian foreign minister to sit down with his counterparts from the five permanent members of the UN Security -- Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States -- plus Germany to discuss Iran's nuclear program.

The Iranian delegation will only join part of the talks being hosted by EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton however, and no-one is keen to raise hopes of a breakthrough in the dragging negotiations.

Indeed the encounter with European, Russian and Chinese foreign ministers is set to be brief.

It comes after speculation that Iran's new President Hassan Rouhani would meet or at least shake hands with President Barack Obama at the United Nations fizzled out.

But diplomats say Thursday's meeting will give them the first chance to take the measure of the new Iranian leadership which took office in August.

And they insist it will give the Iranians the opportunity to prove there is some substance behind Rouhani's charm offensive, and his claims that Iran is only seeking to pursue a peaceful civilian nuclear energy program.

Ashton, who has led Western efforts to engage with Tehran, said this week she was "struck by the energy and determination" of Zarif.

But "as you would appreciate, there is a huge amount of work to do," she added.

The international powers made a new proposal to Tehran this year, before Rouhani's election, believed to offer some relief from international sanctions that have crippled Iran's economy in return for a scaling back of its uranium enrichment.

"There's a sense that we never actually got a firm response or a detailed response to that," a senior US official said.

One western diplomat said however that "while we are sensitive to signals there isn't the slightest overture, it's the same old speech."

"We told him that there is an offer on the table, and that if you have an offer we'll look at it carefully," the diplomat said.

"If the Iranians say they want a new round of talks as they have something serious to propose, we'll accept. If there is the slightest opportunity we'll take it."

For his part Zarif said on his Twitter account from New York: "We have a historic opportunity to resolve the nuclear issue," if world powers adjust to the "new Iranian approach."

Obama and Rouhani, in almost back-to-back speeches at the United Nations on Tuesday, both stressed their willingness to try to resolve the nuclear issue. But they came at it from different perspectives.

Rouhani said Iran poses "absolutely no threat to the world," and condemned the international sanctions against his country.

He reiterated Iran's longstanding position that the international community had to accept Iran's nuclear activity, which Western nations say hides an attempt to reach a nuclear bomb capacity.

Noting that Rouhani has said Iran will "never" build a nuclear bomb, Obama said there was a basis for "a meaningful agreement."

But he stressed: "To succeed, conciliatory words will have to be matched by actions that are transparent and verifiable" on the nuclear program.

"The roadblocks may prove to be too great, but I firmly believe the diplomatic path must be tested," Obama said.

And in an interview with The Washington Post, Rouhani said he hoped to reach an agreement on the nuclear program within three months, insisting he had the full backing of the country's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei to broke a deal.

"The only way forward is for a timeline to be inserted into the negotiations that's short -- and wrap it up. That is a decision of my government, that short is necessary to settle the nuclear file," he said.

"If it's three months that would be Iran's choice, if it's six months that's still good. It's a question of months not years."

In a separate television interview Wednesday, Rouhani said that the right to civilian nuclear energy had become linked to Iranian identity.

"The nuclear issue has turned into an issue of national pride and a symbol of the perseverance of our people," he told "The Charlie Rose Show" on US public television.

Saying that Iranians wanted no more than what is allowed under international law, Rouhani added: "Once we abide by that, I think everything else is settled."

.


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