26 Apr 2024
Wednesday 4 November 2015 - 15:36
Story Code : 187301

Will Iran's nuclear diplomacy lead to regional solutions?

When the dispute over Irans nuclear program began in 2003, I was a member of the first Iranian nuclear negotiating team.

At the time, Ayatollah Khamenei made it very clear to us that he was supportive of taking steps to conclusively substantiate that Irans nuclear program was exclusively for peaceful purposes. He was open to making the nuclear program beholden to the maximum verification measures under international law, and even by constraints, as an unprecedented confidence-building measure.

What the ayatollah fiercely rejected was Iran giving up its legitimate right to enjoy the benefits of nuclear technology, and in particular, uranium enrichment at the levels required for peaceful purposes, such as generating nuclear energy. At that time, he even told current President Hassan Rouhani, who was then chief nuclear negotiator, that if Iran were to give up its right to enrichment, it should either come after his death or his resignation as supreme leader.

Read more here

This article was written by Seyed Hossein Mousavian for Al-Monitor on Nov. 3, 2015. AmbassadorSeyed Hossein Mousavianis a research scholar at Princetons Woodrow Wilson School and a former spokesman for Irans nuclear negotiators.
https://theiranproject.com/vdcjyaevvuqeotz.92fu.html
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