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Iran's Khamenei says US can not be trusted
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) July 21, 2013


Iran opposes Israel-Palestinian peace talks
Tehran (AFP) July 21, 2013 - Iran on Sunday voiced opposition to a US-mediated resumption of peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians, predicting the Jewish state would never agree to withdraw from occupied Arab lands.

Tehran "along with Palestinian groups expresses its opposition to the proposed plan and it's certain that the occupying Zionist regime will utterly not agree to withdraw from the occupied lands," foreign ministry spokesman Abbas Araqchi said, quoted by Iranian media.

"Past experience shows that the occupying Zionist regime is basically not ready to pay the price for peace since war mongering and occupation lie at its very core," he added.

US Secretary of State John Kerry announced on Friday that Israeli and Palestinian negotiators had agreed to meet to prepare a resumption of direct peace talks, stalled since 2010. The exact basis for Kerry's plan remains unknown.

The last round of direct talks between the two sides nearly three years ago broke down over the issue of Israeli settlement building in the occupied West Bank and east Jerusalem.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned ministers on Sunday that renewed peace talks with the Palestinians would be tough, and he said any draft treaty would be put to a referendum.

Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas has repeatedly stressed that his demands for a freeze to Israeli settlement building and the release of prisoners held by Israel must be met before talks can resume.

The Iran-backed Islamist movement Hamas which runs the Gaza Strip rejected a return to talks, saying Abbas had no legitimate right to negotiate on behalf of the Palestinian people.

Iran rules out a two-state solution and has its own vision of how to resolve the six-decade-old conflict between Israel and the Palestinians.

"The end of occupation ... self-determination for the Palestinians, the return of all refugees to their ancestral land, and the creation of an integrated Palestine with Al-Quds (Jerusalem) as its capital," Araqchi reiterated.

Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei warned Sunday that Washington was "not trustworthy", after former US officials and lawmakers urged diplomacy with the Islamic republic's incoming president Hassan Rowhani.

"I said at the beginning of the (Iranian) year that I am not optimistic about negotiations with the US, though in the past years I did not forbid negotiating (with them) about certain issues like Iraq," he told top officials at an "iftar" evening meal that breaks the daily fast during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

Khamenei said in March he was "not optimistic" over the prospects of direct talks with Tehran's archfoe on the sidelines of its nuclear negotiations with major powers.

"The Americans are ... not trustworthy and they are not honest in their encounters... The stance of American officials over past months once again confirms that one should not be optimistic," he said at the iftar, attended by centrist cleric Rowhani and outgoing President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

The comments from Khamenei, who has the final say in the regime's macro policy issues, came less than a week after former US officials and dozens of American lawmakers called for President Barack Obama to pursue diplomacy with Rowhani.

In a letter to Obama, the ex-policymakers said the election of Rowhani, who takes office on August 3, "presents a major potential opportunity."

"We strongly encourage your administration to seize the moment to pursue new multilateral and bilateral negotiations with Iran once Rowhani takes office and to avoid any provocative action that could narrow the window of opportunity for a more moderate policy out of Tehran," they wrote.

And two members of the House of Representatives -- Republican Charles Dent and Democrat David Price -- have led a call for Obama to "utilise all diplomatic tools" with Iran's new president. The lawmakers noted that the presidency in Iran had limited powers but said it "would be a mistake not to test" Rowhani.

"In interacting with the world it's a skill to continue your path without the other side being able to prevent you. If not you have lost," Khamenei added, alluding to Iran's future nuclear talks with world powers after Rowhani, who once served as his country's top nuclear negotiator, takes over from Ahmadinejad.

Rowhani who won a June presidential election has since vowed to engage constructively with the international community and to ease tensions raised by Tehran's nuclear ambitions.

"Moderation in foreign policy means neither surrender nor confrontation but constructive and efficacious interaction with the world," Rowhani has said.

Obama at the start of his first term in office in 2009 offered talks with Iran, which has not had relations with the United States since its 1979 Islamic revolution which overthrew the pro-Western shah.

The United States has led a drive to cut off Iran's oil exports, its key source of revenues, as a way to pressure the regime over its controversial nuclear work.

Western powers and Israel believe the programme is being used to develop an atomic bomb, although Iran insists it is solely for peaceful purposes.

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World powers hope for 'change in tone' in Iran nuclear talks
Brussels, Brussels Capital Region (AFP) July 19, 2013
World powers hope Hassan Rowhani's election as president of Iran will provide fresh impetus and "a change in tone" in ongoing talks on the country's controversial nuclear programme. A senior Western diplomat talking on condition of anonymity said Friday that the so-called P5+1 group of global powers negotiating with Iran hoped to see a new team appointed "soon" in Tehran so the talks can res ... read more


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