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NUKEWARS
Iran defiant, even against big powers' anger: leader
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) Sept 19, 2012

Iran's top negotiator says Istanbul nuclear talks 'fruitful'
Istanbul (AFP) Sept 19, 2012 - Iran's top nuclear negotiator said Wednesday he had a "fruitful" meeting in Istanbul with EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and voiced hope it would help resolve the standoff with the West.

"We had fruitful talks with Lady Ashton last night," Saeed Jalili told a news conference in Istanbul a day after talks with Ashton, who is representing the P5+1 -- the United States, China, Russia, France, Britain and Germany.

"We hope our talks last night will contribute to an ongoing process for better understanding," he said.

Tuesday's meeting on the long-running row over Iran's contested nuclear drive, held behind closed doors at the Iranian consulate in Istanbul, marked the first direct talks since June.

In Brussels, Ashton's office said she aimed to meet with world powers in the coming days "in order to assess the situation and to discuss the way forward".

The foreign ministers of the P5+1 are due in New York for the UN General Assembly going into a "ministerial week" due to begin formally on September 24 and Ashton plans to meet them in a bid to get stop-start international diplomacy over Tehran's atomic programme moving again.

Jalili said Tehran would wait for the results of the P5+1 evaluation after their meeting with Ashton.

Turkey has twice been the venue of meetings on the nuclear standoff since the last negotiation process started earlier this year, with a major meeting held in April and a lower-level gathering in late July.

The P5+1 and Iran made no breakthroughs in the last round of talks in Moscow in June.

World powers have asked Iran to immediately stop enriching uranium because of fears Tehran might be developing nuclear weapons, and imposed a number of sets of sanctions.

But Iran rejects the allegations, saying its nuclear programme is peaceful, designed for energy and development purposes only.


Iran will never bend to pressure exerted by the world's big powers, even if they become "angry" at its defiance, supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in a speech published on his official website on Wednesday.

The Islamic republic "does not accept the demands of any superpower," he told an audience of military personnel and their families in the speech delivered on Tuesday in northern Iran, according to his website, www.leader.ir.

Iran, he said, "makes its decisions solely based on the interests of its people and the country, even if all of the world's powers get angry at its decisions."

Khamenei also accused Western and Israeli media of playing up the pain of sanctions against his country's economy and urged Iranians to ignore such reports.

"Drawing a black and dark picture of the country's situation is the known method of Western and Zionist media aimed at halting the Iranian nation's path," he said.

The five permanent members of the UN Security Council (the United States, Britain, France, China and Russia), plus Germany, are negotiating with Iran to curb its disputed nuclear programme.

At the same time, the Security Council and the West have imposed successive sanctions on Iran to force it to comply.

Tensions have soared in recent weeks, with Israel threatening military strikes against Iran's nuclear facilities, Tehran accusing the UN nuclear watchdog of maybe being infiltrated by "terrorists and saboteurs" intent on doing it harm, and the United States deploying military hardware and leading war games of unprecedented scale in the Gulf.

The powers negotiating with Iran are urging it to suspend higher level uranium enrichment, to ship out its existing stocks of that enriched uranium, and to close a near bomb-proof enrichment bunker in Fordo.

US and EU sanctions are taking a simultaneous toll on Iran's economy by reducing its vital oil exports, creating hardship for both the government and ordinary Iranians.

Iran has repeatedly vowed never to cede to the dual-track pressure. It denies Western allegations its nuclear programme includes any military ambitions.

Khamenei, who is also Iran's military commander-in-chief, has called the possession of atomic weapons a "great sin."

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Ashton to consult with UN after Iran nuclear talks: EU
Brussels (AFP) Sept 19, 2012 - The top negotiator with Iran over its disputed nuclear drive said Wednesday that she would consult with UN partners in New York after face-to-face talks overnight with Iran's Saeed Jalili.

European Union foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton aims to meet with world powers in the coming days "in order to assess the situation and to discuss the way forward," her office said after the first direct talks since June on Tuesday night.

The foreign ministers of Britain, China, France, Russia, the United States and Germany are due in New York for the United Nations General Assembly going into a "ministerial week" due to begin formally on September 24.

Ashton plans to meet these key figures in the margins of the UN talks, in a bid to get stop-start international diplomacy over Tehran's contested atomic programme back moving.

No statements were made to the press at the beginning of Tuesday's meeting with Iran's top nuclear negotiator Jalili, which was held behind closed doors at the Iranian consulate in the Turkish city of Istanbul, starting at around 1930 GMT Tuesday.

Described simply as part of ongoing efforts "to seek a diplomatic solution," the talks followed negotiations in Moscow in June, a meeting of the respective heads' deputies in July and phone calls made over the summer, Ashton's statement said.

"While it was not a formal negotiating round it was a useful and constructive meeting and an important opportunity to stress once again to Iran the urgent need to make progress," said the declaration issued by EU High Representative Ashton's spokesman Michael Mann.

World powers have asked Iran to immediately stop enriching uranium because of fears Tehran might be developing nuclear weapons.

But Iran rejects the allegations, saying its nuclear programme is peaceful, designed for energy and development purposes only.

Jalili met earlier Tuesday with Turkey's Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu to discuss the resumption of international talks over Tehran's atomic programme, a diplomatic source said.



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London (UPI) Sep 18, 2012
While the U.S. presidential debates are just on the corner, I have a simple suggestion for U.S. President Barack Obama and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney when it comes to foreign policy: The time is now for Iran. The nuclear clock has been a source of anxiety for many in the West for nearly a decade. In Syria, it appears it is time for the Assad regime to fall, and with it the la ... read more


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