IRANIAN MFA DOESN'T RULE OUT NORMALIZATION OF RELATIONS WITH U.S.
PanARMENIAN.Net
28.01.2008 16:14 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Iran's foreign minister said on Saturday he could
envisage the Islamic Republic resuming diplomatic ties with the United
States one day but that many hurdles remained to normal relations.
Manouchehr Mottaki said Tehran was not committed to "cutting relations
with the United States forever", despite tensions with Washington
over its nuclear program and U.S. accusations that Iran has fomented
violence in neighboring Iraq.
Iran regularly calls for a change in behavior from the United States,
which cut diplomatic ties in 1980 after radical students seized the
U.S. embassy in Tehran and took diplomats hostage during the 1979
Islamic revolution.
"How and when this relationship can take place again, it depends
on so many factors," Mottaki told reporters on the sidelines of the
World Economic Forum in the Swiss alpine town of Davos..
Asked if this year's U.S. presidential election could mark a turning
point in relations, he said: "We are trying not to look at the
individuals, to the parties, but looking...at the policies."
Mottaki said he had not detected any change in the U.S. approach
towards his country, but his measured comments followed a speech to
the forum by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice which included a
conciliatory note towards Tehran.
After weeks of anti-Iranian rhetoric by the Bush administration,
Rice said on Wednesday that Washington had no desire for Iran to be
a permanent enemy.
Rice said the nuclear standoff could be resolved diplomatically and
offered the prospect of normal ties if Iran gave up sensitive nuclear
work - a demand Iran has rejected, Reuters reports.
From: Baghdasarian
PanARMENIAN.Net
28.01.2008 16:14 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Iran's foreign minister said on Saturday he could
envisage the Islamic Republic resuming diplomatic ties with the United
States one day but that many hurdles remained to normal relations.
Manouchehr Mottaki said Tehran was not committed to "cutting relations
with the United States forever", despite tensions with Washington
over its nuclear program and U.S. accusations that Iran has fomented
violence in neighboring Iraq.
Iran regularly calls for a change in behavior from the United States,
which cut diplomatic ties in 1980 after radical students seized the
U.S. embassy in Tehran and took diplomats hostage during the 1979
Islamic revolution.
"How and when this relationship can take place again, it depends
on so many factors," Mottaki told reporters on the sidelines of the
World Economic Forum in the Swiss alpine town of Davos..
Asked if this year's U.S. presidential election could mark a turning
point in relations, he said: "We are trying not to look at the
individuals, to the parties, but looking...at the policies."
Mottaki said he had not detected any change in the U.S. approach
towards his country, but his measured comments followed a speech to
the forum by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice which included a
conciliatory note towards Tehran.
After weeks of anti-Iranian rhetoric by the Bush administration,
Rice said on Wednesday that Washington had no desire for Iran to be
a permanent enemy.
Rice said the nuclear standoff could be resolved diplomatically and
offered the prospect of normal ties if Iran gave up sensitive nuclear
work - a demand Iran has rejected, Reuters reports.
From: Baghdasarian