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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
'Iran wants fresh nuclear dialogue, may talk to US
2006-05-31
Iran said on Tuesday it wanted to resume nuclear negotiations with the EU and could even talk to Washington if its archfoe "changed behaviour." Tehran also said it was willing to negotiate on the number of uranium-enriching centrifuges it uses for research, but stressed it would not stop running the devices entirely as the UN Security Council has called for.

Washington dismissed the overture. The five Security Council permanent powers and Germany will meet in Vienna on Thursday in hopes of finalising a package of incentives for Iran to halt enrichment along with penalties if it keeps defying international pressure, officials said. Iran has vowed that nothing will dissuade it from having full-fledged nuclear technology on its soil, spurring one senior EU diplomat to say on Tuesday that the painstakingly crafted incentives could end up an "academic and theoretical exercise." "Europeans should consider irreversible realities in any proposal they plan to offer Iran," Iranian deputy atomic energy chief Mohammad Saeedi said, alluding to Iran's first successful production of fuel for atomic power plants, announced in April. "If they ignore these realities, any proposal will surely face difficulties," he told a Tehran University gathering.

Speaking in Malaysia, Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said Tehran could resume dialogue with the United States, after a 26-year official freeze, if Washington changed its behaviour. He did not say what behaviour. Iran has said previously Washington must stop seeking to topple its Islamic government. US State Department Spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters in Washington: "We've heard that from them before. Nothing new there."

EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana said the European Union would welcome direct talks between the United States and Iran, but it was for Washington and Tehran to decide. "As far as direct contacts between the US and Iran, as you know they've spent 20 years not talking to each other," he said. "A logical analysis would say that that should come to an end because Iran is going to be a very important player in the world. But this is a decision that... they have to take."
Posted by:Fred

#3  Ah, the Don Corleone philosophy applied to international relations......
Posted by: mcsegeek1   2006-05-31 12:45  

#2  The "package of incentives" bullshit is amazing. As it stands, it's an appeasement offer. If it was being demanded, it would be blackmail. Either is absurd.

If the Mullahs were to accept this bribe they could continue the under the table game and eventually get their nukes - and we'd be screwed.

I believe luck is on our side, however. They're not that smart. The March to Doom continues.
Posted by: Grolet Elmigum3667   2006-05-31 00:32  

#1  It's ok. Gives us times to get all our ducks in line.
Posted by: 3dc   2006-05-31 00:31  

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