29 Mar 2024
Saturday 16 February 2013 - 20:41
Story Code : 20485

Irans foreign minister again signals openness to talks

TEHRAN Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi has reiterated the possibility of direct negotiations with the United States, although his statement was less enthusiastic thancommentshe made in Germany 10 days ago. In an interview with the semi-official Mehr News agency published Saturday, he basically said that its up to the countrys supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, to decide whether Iran will talk.
I read this,like Ahmadinejads speech last Sunday, as trying to bring Khamenei back into the dialogue as the decider. We should fully expect more developments on this leading up to the planned multi-nation talks in Kazakhstan on Feb. 26. Heres the Mehr News report:
TEHRAN, Feb. 16 (MNA) Iran Foreign Minister says that if the US proves that their intentions are true and honest, Iran will consider it with positive view.

In an interview with Mehr News, Ali Akbar Salehi pointed to the final status of negotiation proposal by the US and said we have two types of negotiations with the US, one is that we have comprehensive discussion on the political relationship, Supreme Leader will decide holding or not holding this kind of negotiation, and it is part of his authorities, and of course we have not had any such discussion, and if the time and conditions are ready, the Supreme Leader will decide about that.
Salehi called the other type of negotiations thematic negotiations. We negotiated with the US about Afghanistan, in Bern, Switzerland. We also talk to them about the crisis in Iraq, so you can see that we could have thematic negotiations with the US.

He also asserted that even the thematic negotiations are done with Leaders discretion and not anyone on his own can start a negotiation with the US.
It seems as if Iranian officials know they need to start talking but want to make the supreme leader more of a focal point. And this seems in line with the idea that Khamenei wants progress but doesnt want a deal until after the June presidential election.

By The Washington Post

 

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