10 Nov 2024
Monday 7 October 2013 - 13:16
Story Code : 55591

Kerry: U.S. waiting for Iran nuke reply

BALI, Indonesia Warming relations between the United States and Iran do not mean that the United States will back off its demands about Irans nuclear program, or roll back missile defenses in Europe aimed at intercepting an Iranian attack, Secretary of State John F. Kerry said Monday.
Irans foreign minister, who met with Kerry last month at the United Nations, was quoted in state media Sunday saying the United States should bring new proposals to a nuclear bargaining session next week. Kerry appeared to reject that, saying Iran still hasnt responded to the last offer put forth by the United States, Russia and others in February.







Were waiting for the fullness of the Iranian difference in their approach now, Kerry said, following a meeting here with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. But were encouraged by the statements that were made in New York, and were encouraged by the outreach.Iranian President Hassan Rouhani argued at the U.N. General Assembly last month that Irans program is not dangerous and that his country will cooperate with monitors to prove that. Sanctions are counterproductive and should end, he argued.

On the sidelines of the U.N. meeting in New York, Kerry had an unusual meeting with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, and President ObamatelephonedRouhani for the first direct contact between leaders of the two nations since before the 1979 Iranian revolution and takeover of the U.S. Embassy.

Lavrov, who plans to attend next weeks much-anticipated nuclear meeting in Switzerland, said the international group negotiating with Iran wants a roadmap which would, at the end of the day, satisfy the international community that the Iranian nuclear program is entirely peaceful, and pulled under the full control of international nuclear monitors.

Iran probably wants more clarity, more specific steps to be spelled out on the road to the result which we all want to achieve., Lavrov said. And I think this would be discussed next week in Geneva.

A Russian reporter asked Kerry whether the apparent thaw in the long U.S.-Iranian enmity means that the missile defense architecture is no longer needed. Russia has been opposed for years to U.S. plans to defend European allies with a network of interceptors. The United States insists the system is defensive and built with Iran in mind. Russian leaders have long questioned that.

The talk of these first days and the exchanges of a couple of meetings and a phone call do not indicate a closeness, Kerry said. They indicate an opportunity. They indicate the opening of a door or a window to some discussion.

While Washington is eager to explore the possibility of a negotiated settlement with Iran over its disputed nuclear program, its too early to say whether the thaw begun at the United Nations last month will lead to a change in U.S. policy, Kerry said.

Its way too premature to make any determinations about where we would wind up with respect to the deployment of the missile defense, Kerry said. As long as that threat is there, we still have to deal with that issue.

By The Washington Post

 

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