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NUKEWARS
Iran's Khamenei touts flexibility ahead of talks
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) Sept 17, 2013


Obama pledges to test Iran's willingness for dialogue
Washington (AFP) Sept 17, 2013 - US President Barack Obama pledged Tuesday to test the sincerity of signs that new Iranian President Hassan Rowhani may be ready for a newly productive nuclear dialogue with the West.

Days after revealing he and Rowhani had swapped letters, Obama however said that Iran would have to demonstrate its own seriousness by agreeing not to "weaponize nuclear power."

"There is an opportunity here for diplomacy," Obama said in an interview with the Spanish language television network Telemundo.

"I hope the Iranians take advantage of it. There are indications that Rowhani, the new president, is somebody who is looking to open dialogue with the West and with the United States -- in a way that we haven't seen in the past.

"And so we should test it," Obama said.

Hopes for a new round of nuclear talks between Iran and world powers expected to resume soon were boosted earlier Tuesday by cryptic remarks by Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Khamenei, who bears ultimate responsibility for the nuclear issue, said that sometimes flexibility was necessary in diplomacy.

On September 11, Rowhani said he had the tacit support of Khamenei for "flexibility" in nuclear talks.

Rowhani has said he wants to allay Western concerns but that he will not renounce Iran's goal of an independent civil nuclear program.

Washington and its allies say Iran's nuclear program is designed to produce weapons and is unacceptable. Obama has refused to rule out US military action against Iran if diplomacy fails.

Iran insists that its nuclear ambitions are directed towards civilian energy generation.

There is renewed speculation that Obama and Rowhani could have some kind of informal meeting in New York next week at the UN General Assembly in New York.

The White House said for the second day running Tuesday that it has no current plans for such an encounter -- but did not dismiss the possibility out of hand.

Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on Tuesday that flexibility was sometimes necessary in diplomacy as his negotiators prepared for new talks on his government's controversial nuclear drive.

Khamenei's comments, reported by state television, came after Iran's moderate new President Hassan Rowhani, who took office last month, said he would show flexibility in renewed talks with the major powers.

"Heroic flexibility is very useful and necessary sometimes but with adherence to one main condition," Khamenei told members of the elite Revolutionary Guards.

"A wrestler sometimes shows flexibility for technical reasons. But he does not forget about his opponent nor about his main objective," Khamenei said.

On September 11, Rowhani said he had the tacit support of Khamenei for "flexibility" in talks with six major powers that are expected to resume in the coming weeks.

Rowhani has said he wants to allay Western concerns but that he will not renounce Iran's goal of an independent civil nuclear programme.

Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif was to fly to New York later on Tuesday to attend the United Nations General Assembly.

On the sidelines, he is scheduled to meet the European Union's top diplomat, Catherine Ashton, who represents the powers in the decade-long talks.

Rowhani has vowed to take a more constructive approach to the talks than his hardline predecessor Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in a bid to win a relaxation of crippling Western sanctions imposed on Iran's oil and banking sectors.

His approach has drawn a cautious welcome from Western governments which have long suspected that Iran's nuclear programme is cover for a drive for a weapons capability, an ambition Tehran has always denied.

US President Barack Obama has refused to rule out a resort to military action to prevent Iran developing a weapons capability, a position echoed by its regional ally Israel.

Iran's foreign ministry spokeswoman Marzieh Afkham on Tuesday strongly criticised Obama's position.

"It is a source of regret that he still uses the language of threat after we told them to replace it with one of respect," Afkham told reporters.

In an earlier statement, she said it was "unjustifiable" that the White House should "violate international rules and the UN charter to cater to the interests of lobbies by resorting to the military option."

"The Obama government must understand that the use of the language of threats against the Islamic republic of Iran will not have the slightest effect on the determination of the government and the nation to defend their absolute nuclear rights, particularly on enriching uranium," she said.

In an interview with ABC News on Sunday, Obama said that a deal between Washington and Moscow to dismantle the chemical arsenal of Iran ally Syria and avert Western military action offered a "lesson" in the benefits of diplomacy.

But the US president again warned Tehran over its nuclear programme.

"My suspicion is that the Iranians recognise they shouldn't draw a lesson -- that we haven't struck (Syria) -- to think we won't strike Iran," he said.

In the ABC interview, Obama also revealed that he and his Iranian counterpart had exchanged letters.

Afkham confirmed that an exchange of letters had taken place "through diplomatic channels," without going into details.

Tehran and Washington have had no diplomatic relations since the aftermath of Iran's 1979 Islamic revolution when US embassy staff were held hostage.

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Obama says he and Iran's Rowhani swapped letters
Washington (AFP) Sept 15, 2013
Barack Obama has revealed an exchange of letters with Iran's new President Hassan Rowhani but warned his reluctance to strike Syria should not devalue US threats of force to thwart an Iranian nuclear bomb. The US president, in an interview aired Sunday, publicly confirmed the outreach to Rowhani for the first time, and said he believed the Syria chemical arms drama showed that diplomacy coul ... read more


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