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World powers urge Iran to accept EU talks invitation

World powers tell Iran door still open
Washington (AFP) July 2, 2010 - World powers negotiating on Iran's nuclear program have renewed their offer for talks despite imposing new sanctions against the Islamic republic, the United States said Friday. Senior US diplomat William Burns traveled to Brussels for talks with Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the European Union on the next steps on Iran, the State Department said. "They restated the offer to meet with Iran for discussions on the nuclear issue and stressed the door remains open to Iran," State Department spokesman Mark Toner told reporters. He said the powers endorsed an offer by EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton, who wrote to Iran last month inviting him for talks.

The so-called P5-plus-One -- the five veto-wielding powers on the Security Council plus Germany -- were instrumental in pushing forward a UN resolution last month that imposed a fourth set of sanctions on Iran. The Brussels meeting agreed on the "importance of swift enforcement" of the resolution, Toner said. The United States and European Union are worried that Iran's clerical regime, which is staunchly anti-Western and anti-Israel, is developing nuclear weapons. But US President Barack Obama has also offered to engage in dialogue with Iran to find a way to end decades of hostility. Iran insists that its nuclear program is only for peaceful purposes.
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) July 2, 2010
World powers urged Iran on Friday to rapidly accept a European Union invitation to resume talks aimed at resolving the standoff over Tehran's controversial nuclear programme.

Top diplomats from the United States, China, Russia, France, Germany and Britain met in Brussels with EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton to discuss the implementation of new UN sanctions against Iran, the group said in a statement.

"We confirmed our readiness to continue dialogue and interaction with Iran," said the political directors from the foreign ministries of the six nations.

They added that they "looked forward to an early reply from the Iranian nuclear negotiator Jalili to Catherine Ashton's letter proposing the rapid resumption of talks on the nuclear issue."

Ashton said last month that she had written a letter to Iran's chief nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili, inviting him to resume negotiations on behalf of the five UN Security Council permanent members -- the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France -- plus Germany.

But the Iranians have yet to respond to her invitation.

A senior EU official said the six world powers are expecting a response, or even a meeting, in mid-August at the earliest or in September.

The location of such a meeting would also need to be decided, but the official said it was unlikely to take place in Tehran at this stage.

"It would be too soon to be talking in Tehran, it would give too high expectations," the official said.

The UN Security Council imposed a fourth set of sanctions against Iran in June to punish Tehran for refusing to halt its uranium enrichment work, the most sensitive part of its atomic drive.

Since then, the United States and the EU have imposed their own sanctions targeting the Islamic republic's key energy sector.

The United States, European Union powers and Israel suspect Iran is hiding a secret nuclear weapons programme, but Tehran denies the charge, insisting that it is a peaceful drive to provide civilian energy.



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NUKEWARS
Iran tells UN it is 'more determined' on nuclear drive
Tehran (AFP) July 1, 2010
A defiant Iran said on Thursday it has told UN Security Council members that new sanctions will not affect its nuclear programme, prompting France to say Tehran was not heading in the right direction. Tehran "considers that the adoption of such (UN) resolutions will not affect its utterly peaceful nuclear programme," the official IRNA news agency quoted Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki as ... read more







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