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U.S. President: Iran Has Right To Pursue Civilian Nuclear Program

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  • U.S. President: Iran Has Right To Pursue Civilian Nuclear Program

    U.S. PRESIDENT: IRAN HAS RIGHT TO PURSUE CIVILIAN NUCLEAR PROGRAM

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    03.04.2009 21:49 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The United States and Russia on Wednesday declared
    that Iran has a right to pursue a civilian nuclear program, but warned
    that the country must abide by an international treaty and prove that
    its contentious efforts were of a "peaceful nature".

    "While we recognize that under the NPT [Treaty on the Non-Proliferation
    of Nuclear Weapons] Iran has the right to a civilian nuclear program,
    Iran needs to restore confidence in its exclusively peaceful nature,"
    U.S. President Barack Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
    announced in a joint statement ahead of their first sit-down.

    Striving to ease strained relations, Obama and Medvedev said in
    their statement that "the era when our countries viewed each other
    as enemies is long over."

    They pledged to work together to limit the world's two largest nuclear
    arsenals and said they would try to put a new nuclear arms reduction
    deal in place before the existing treaty expires in December.

    The White House also announced that Obama was accepting Medvedev's
    invitation to visit Moscow this summer.

    "Over the last several years, the relationship between our two
    countries has been allowed to drift," Obama told reporters after
    his meeting with Medvedev. "What I believe we've begun today is a
    very constructive dialogue that will allow us to work on issues of
    mutual interest."

    Striking a similar tone with the U.S. president at his side, the
    Russian president said: "I am more optimistic of the successful
    development of our relations."

    As for nuclear arms control, the two said in their joint statement
    that, "We are instructing our negotiators to start talks immediately
    on this new treaty and to report on results achieved in working out
    the new agreement by July.

    Their newly professed commitment to reinvigorate arms-control
    initiatives that have lain dormant for years caused a stir at the
    London site of a G-20 summit that seemed otherwise transfixed on a
    deepening worldwide recession, Haaretz reported.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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