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Iran ready for ‘serious and substantial’ nuclear talks, Rouhani says

Iran's new president, Hassan Rouhani, waves to reporters at the conclusion of a news conference in Tehran.
(Ebrahim Noroozi / Associated Press)
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TEHRAN — Iran is ready for “serious” and swift talks with world powers over its controversial nuclear program, the country’s new president said Tuesday, echoing his own earlier calls for a better dialogue with the West.

The remarks by Hassan Rouhani came at his first news conference as Iran’s president. The moderate cleric won a landslide victory in June presidential elections and took the oath of office Sunday.

“We are ready to engage in serious and substantial talks without wasting time,” Rouhani said, but he warned that Iran’s interactions with the West should be based on “talks, not threats.”

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Many Iranians and foreign diplomats hope Rouhani, a former top nuclear negotiator, can strike a more conciliatory tone in the talks. Four rounds of negotiations since last year have failed to make significant headway.

The U.S. and its allies fear Iran is trying to develop a nuclear weapon, a charge Tehran denies, saying its atomic program is meant for peaceful purposes only, such as power generation and medical isotopes.

Rouhani replaced Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who struck a hard-line approach when dealing with the West and its sanctions over Iran’s nuclear program. The sanctions have hit the country’s economy hard, decimating its vital oil exports and blocking transactions on international banking networks.

Though all Iranian policies, including the nuclear issue, are firmly in the hands of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, a strong president can influence decision-making. Rouhani has in the past said that he would make it his priority to get the sanctions against Iran lifted.

“I, as the president of Iran, announce that Iran has a serious political will to solve the [nuclear] problem while protecting the rights of the Iranian people at the same time as it seeks to remove concerns of the other party,” Rouhani told reporters in Tehran.

Rouhani has repeatedly said that he believes it’s possible to strike an agreement that would allow the Islamic Republic to keep enriching uranium — the core issue at the center of the nuclear controversy and a potential pathway to atomic weapons — while assuring the West it will not produce nuclear arms.

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On Tuesday, he said uranium enrichment is Iran’s right, as it is for any other country, but that he would look to “remove mutual concerns, achieve mutual interests and a win-win deal for both sides.”

Rouhani indicated he would “not have any problem to talk” directly to Washington and to “whoever wants to talk to us in good will … even if it is the U.S.,” as long as the other party is “serious about talks and abandons the language of pressure and threat.”

Rouhani admitted, however, that there is a “long way to go” before Iran would allow the U.S. Consulate to resume work in Tehran.

The United States cut diplomatic ties with Iran after militant students stormed the U.S. Embassy in Tehran to protest Washington’s support for deposed Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi after the country’s 1979 revolution.

Earlier Tuesday, the European Union’s foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, called on Rouhani to schedule “meaningful talks” on the nuclear issue as soon as possible.

Ashton said she and the group of nations negotiating with Iran — the five permanent U.N. Security Council nations plus Germany — “stand ready to continue talks to find a resolution.”

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In Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu urged the international community to step up pressure on Tehran.

“Iran’s president said that pressure won’t work. Not true! The only thing that has worked in the last two decades is pressure. And the only thing that will work now is increased pressure,” Netanyahu said in comments released by his office Tuesday.

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