Tag: nuclear talks

  • UPDATE 4-Iran offers dates for talks with powers in Turkey | Energy & Oil | Reuters

    UPDATE 4-Iran offers dates for talks with powers in Turkey | Energy & Oil | Reuters

    * Iran says it’s ready to meet six powers in Istanbul

    * Sends uncompromising signals ahead of any talks

    * Powers want Iran to address nuclear concerns

    (Adds U.S., UK reaction, EU sources, detail)

    By Parisa Hafezi

    TEHRAN, Nov 9 (Reuters) – Iran told world powers on Tuesday it was ready to hold talks in Turkey in late November or early December, but a senior official signalled reluctance to discuss Tehran’s disputed nuclear plans at the meeting.

    Western diplomats have made clear they want Iran to address their concerns about its nuclear programme in discussions that six major powers — the United States, France, Russia, Britain, Germany and China — have offered to Tehran later this month.

    Analysts say rivalries within Iran’s conservative establishment may make it more difficult for the powers to strike any agreements with the Islamic Republic to restrain its nuclear activity, or even to conduct meaningful talks.   Continued…

    via UPDATE 4-Iran offers dates for talks with powers in Turkey | Energy & Oil | Reuters.

  • Turkey expects to host Iran nuclear talks: Gul | Reuters

    Turkey expects to host Iran nuclear talks: Gul | Reuters

    By Anna Yukhananov

    OXFORD, England | Mon Nov 8, 2010 4:09pm EST

    (Reuters) – Turkey expects to host talks between Iran and six major powers on Tehran’s nuclear programme “some time soon,” President Abdullah Gul said on Monday.

    Iran’s Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said on Sunday Iran was ready to hold talks with the five permanent U.N. Security Council members plus Germany (known as the P5+1) and that Turkey might be the best venue.

    “As a result of more recent developments, you have also heard that Turkey will host the P5+1 meeting with Iran in Turkey and that is going to happen some time soon,” Gul said at an event in Oxford, England.

    Largely Muslim Turkey is a NATO member and candidate for European Union membership. It has developed closer commercial and political relations with neighbor Iran in the last few years.

    Gul, speaking through an interpreter, said Turkey believed talks were important confidence-building measures and steps toward a diplomatic solution.”

    Many countries are concerned Iran is using a civilian nuclear programme to conceal development of nuclear weapons, something the Islamic Republic denies. Tehran says it seeks nuclear energy only for generation of electricity.

    The failure of talks between Iran and the major powers a year ago led to a tightening of international sanctions against Tehran.

    The eight-year-old stand-off has the potential to ignite a regional arms race.

    Israel and its main ally, the United States, do not rule out a pre-emptive strike to stop Iran getting the bomb.

    Gul said Turkey had seen the consequences of war in the Middle East during the 1990s and during the war in Iraq.

    “To have another war that involves a neighboring country is not an experience that we would like to live through again. For this reason we are trying to ensure that these problems can be resolved through diplomacy,” he said, at an event hosted by the Oxford Center for Islamic Studies.

    The “P5+1” — the United States, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany — has offered talks on November 15-17 in Vienna, an approach welcomed by Iran but not formally agreed to.

    Iran has sent mixed signals over a resumption of talks.

    A senior aide to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has said that even if Iran did agree to the talks it would not negotiate about its nuclear programme.

    (Writing by Adrian Croft; Editing by Ralph Boulton)

    via Turkey expects to host Iran nuclear talks: Gul | Reuters.

  • Turkey says Iran proposes Nov. 23 or Dec. 5 as date for nuclear talks

    Turkey says Iran proposes Nov. 23 or Dec. 5 as date for nuclear talks

    ANKARA, Nov. 10 (Xinhua) — Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Wednesday that Iran has proposed either Nov. 23 or Dec. 5 as the date for planned talks with major powers on its nuclear program in Istanbul, local media reported.

    Iranian officials had two proposals on the date of the negotiations with the five UN Security Council permanent members and Germany (G5+1) and were waiting for a response, Erdogan was quoted by the semi-official Anatolia news agency as saying.

    Iranian media reported Tuesday that Iran sent an official letter to the European Union’s foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton on Tuesday and proposed the date and place for talks. Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki was quoted by local Mehr news agency as saying they were considering Nov. 15 as the date.

    Erdogan said the Iran nuclear issue could come up during his meeting with U.S. President Barack Obama at the G20 summit, which is due on Thursday and Friday in South Korea.

    In October, Ashton said in Brussels that Iran has announced readiness to resume talks over the nuclear program after Nov. 10, which had been suspended since October 2009 when the two sides met in Geneva.

    Iran has reiterated that its potential upcoming talks with G5+1 will not only include the country’s controversial nuclear issue, but should encompass diverse range of global issues which are of interests for both sides.

    Western countries have called on Tehran to halt its sensitive nuclear program, but the country ruled out the calls and repeated that its nuclear activities aim at civilian purposes.

    Editor: Mu Xuequan

  • Iran ready to negotiate with six mediators in Istanbul

    Iran ready to negotiate with six mediators in Istanbul

    Iran proposed holding negotiations with the six mediators over the nuclear issue in Istanbul on November 23 or December 5, a diplomatic source told ITAR-TASS Tuesday evening in Brussels.

    According to the source, Saeed Jalili, Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council expressed Iran’s readiness for the talks in his message to Catherine Ashton, High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy.

    Meanwhile Turkish President Abdullah Gul said in London, where he had arrived to receive Chatham House Prize, that his country is ready to host talks between Iran and the six mediators.

    via Iran ready to negotiate with six mediators in Istanbul – aysor.am – Hot news from Armenia.

  • Turkey: Iran suggests dates for nuclear talks in Istanbul

    Turkey: Iran suggests dates for nuclear talks in Istanbul

    Istanbul – Iran has proposed two possible dates for nuclear talks that would be held in Istanbul, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Wednesday.

    The state-run Anatolian Agency said Erdogan told reporters in Ankara that Tehran had proposed either November 23 or December 5 as possible dates for a meeting with the so-called P5+1 group, which comprises Britain, China, France, Russia, Germany and the US.

    Iran and the P5+1 group last met in Geneva in October of 2009 to talk about Iran’s nuclear programme.

    European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, speaking on behalf of the group, had previously proposed that Iran resume the talks on November 15 in Vienna.

    Ankara last May helped broker a deal with Iran that would have the country’s low-enriched uranium sent to Turkey.

    via Turkey: Iran suggests dates for nuclear talks in Istanbul – Monsters and Critics.

  • Iran pushes for nuclear talks in Turkey

    Iran pushes for nuclear talks in Turkey

    It’s unknown if the U.S. and other world powers have agreed to the proposal. The move is seen as an effort to put diplomatic pressure on Washington and its allies.

    By Borzou Daragahi, Los Angeles Times

    Reporting from Amman, Jordan —

    Iran agreed to talks with the United States and other world powers on the Islamic Republic’s nuclear program, provided negotiations take place in neighboring Turkey, officials said Sunday. The offer probably was meant to put diplomatic pressure on the U.S. and its allies.

    There was no word on whether the U.S. or other world powers had approved of the proposal. European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton had previously proposed Vienna, home to the International Atomic Energy Agency and many diplomats familiar with the Iranian nuclear program, as the venue for talks.

    But Turkey’s semiofficial Anatolian news agency quoted Foreign Ministry officials as saying that “parties had agreed in principle to hold the talks in Turkey,” though no date or specific site has been set.

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    “We told our friends in Turkey two or three days ago that we have agreed to meet with five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany in Turkey,” Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki told reporters in Tehran on Sunday, according to local news agencies.

    Turkey, a North Atlantic Treaty Organization member that opposed the latest round of United Nations sanctions on Iran, upset the Obama administration this year when it and Brazil cut a deal with Tehran to send about half of Iran’s nuclear fuel supply to Turkey in exchange for plates to power an ailing Iranian medical reactor. U.S. officials accused Turkey and Brazil of undermining the American- and European-led attempt to present a united international diplomatic front against Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

    Also, relations between Turkey and U.S. ally Israel, which considers the Iranian nuclear program its top security challenge, have recently reached a new low. Ankara recently added Israel to its list of strategic threats, according to a document leaked to the Turkish media.

    Talks between Iran and world powers stalled more than a year ago after Iran did not agree to a plan to send more than half its nuclear fuel supply to Russia and then France in exchange for medical-reactor fuel.

    The Obama administration rallied a skeptical Russia and China into supporting a fresh round of international sanctions on Iran, then pressed countries in Europe and other developed nations to impose even harsher unilateral restrictions on trade with Iran.

    But the Islamic Republic continued to enrich uranium, even producing some fuel at 20% rates of purity, suitable for the medical reactor but worrisome to arms-control experts. Uranium enriched at higher levels can be used to arm an atomic bomb.

    The U.S. and world powers are reportedly planning to offer Iran a proposal similar to the reactor deal offered last year, but with larger quantities and with a stipulation that Iran stop producing the 20%-enriched uranium.

    Western diplomats long struggling with Iran over its nuclear program are skeptical that the impending round of talks will succeed. Iranian officials have already begun accusing world powers of stacking the deck against them by complicating the terms of negotiations and putting forth multiple proposals.

    “Tehran should pay attention to the fact that we cannot enter negotiations based on different proposals presented by the West,” the Mehr news agency quoted Iranian lawmaker Javad Jahangirzadeh as saying.

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    Special correspondent Meris Lutz in Beirut contributed to this report.

    via Iran nuclear talks: Iran pushes for nuclear talks in Turkey – chicagotribune.com.