Monday, July 07, 2008
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
Video Finance Features Weather Travel Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
World News

 
 

Nuclear issue off limits in US-Iraq talks: Iran
Posted: 21 May 2007 0127 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 

TEHRAN : Iran said on Sunday its nuclear standoff with the West will be strictly off the agenda when Iranian officials hold rare talks this month with US diplomats in Baghdad over Iraq.

"We do not want there to be any connection between the nuclear talks and the discussions on Iraq," foreign ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini told reporters.

"If there is someone who wants to connect the nuclear issue with Iraq then this is something that we do not want," he added.

US and Iranian envoys are to meet in Baghdad on May 28 for talks on Iraqi security, three days ahead of the latest encounter between Iran's nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani and EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana to break the deadlock in the nuclear crisis.

Iran's leaders have repeatedly said they are ready for full negotiations with the United States, but only if Washington changes its position towards the Islamic republic which it accuses of sponsoring terrorism.

"As we have said, we will not have negotiations with the United States unless they rectify their position," said Hosseini.

He declined to say whether the May 28 meeting on Iraq would be followed by other encounters. "Let the first session convene, do not make speculation and we will see what happens."

Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said last week that Iran would merely use the talks with US diplomats over Iraq to remind Washington of its "occupiers' duty" in the conflict-torn country.

The United States accuses Iran of seeking nuclear weapons and wants Tehran to freeze sensitive uranium enrichment operations immediately. Iran says its atomic drive is peaceful and that it has every right to the full fuel cycle.

US-Iran relations have been frozen since 1980 after radical students stormed the American embassy in Tehran in the wake of the country's Islamic revolution and held its diplomats hostage for 444 days. - AFP/de

 

 



Other world News
Heatwave looms as wildfires rage across California
Top UN official shot dead in Mogadishu
London police release suspect in French students' murder case
Bush to meet Russia's Medvedev
Sarkozy calls for G8 to lift food export restriction
Betancourt sends message to jungle hostages
Syria blames inmates for deadly prison riot
French student's parents in plea to London killer
Japan's former premier says Bush, Sarkozy fought fiercely at last G8
Israel reopens Gaza crossings
Rotting cheese recycled in Italian food scam
France to set out new European priorities for immigration

 


Advertisements

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions