Jan. 26, 2012 2:18
PM ET
Iran is ready to return to nuclear talks
ALI AKBAR
DAREINI,
Associated Press

Associated Press FILE - In this Oct. 29,. 2011file photo,
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
gestures as he delivers a speech during a
meeting with guests of The Press Union of
the Islamic World, at the presidency
compound, Tehran, Iran. Iran is ready to
revive talks with the world powers,
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Thursday,
Jan. 26, 2012 as toughening sanctions aim at
forcing Tehran to sharply scale back its
nuclear program. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi,
File)
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran is ready to
revive talks with the U.S. and other world
powers, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said
Thursday, but suggested that Tehran's foes
will have to make compromises to prevent
negotiations from again collapsing in
stalemate.
Iran's insistence that it will never give up
uranium enrichment — the process that makes
material for reactors as well as weapons —
scuttled negotiations a year ago and still
looms as a potential deal breaker even as
tougher Western sanctions target Iran's
critical oil exports.
Ahmadinejad added his voice to proposals by
Iranian officials to return to talks
Thursday at a rally in the southeastern city
of Kerman, saying a nation that is in the
"right" should not be worried about holding
dialogue.
Iran indicated earlier this week that it was
ready for a new round of talks with the five
permanent U.N. Security Council members plus
Germany. Ahmadinejad — the highest-ranking
official so far to make the offer — gave no
further details about a potential timetable
or venue.
The European Union's foreign policy chief
Catherine Ashton had welcomed the proposals
to restart talks — possibly in Turkey — but
urged Tehran to bring "some concrete issues
to talk about."
"It is very important that it is not just
about words. A meeting is not an excuse, a
meeting is an opportunity and I hope that
they will seize it," she said Monday in
Brussels as the 27-nation bloc adopted its
toughest measures yet on Iran with an oil
embargo and freeze of the country's central
bank assets.
That followed U.S. action also aimed at
limiting Iran's ability to sell oil, which
accounts for 80 percent of its foreign
revenue.
In the past, Iran has angered Western
officials by appearing to buy time through
opening talks and weighing proposals even
while pressing ahead with its nuclear
program.
Britain's Foreign Office said that the six
world powers were awaiting a response to a
letter sent to Tehran by Ashton in October.
"The door is open, if Iran is willing to
talk about its nuclear program in a serious
and meaningful manner, without
preconditions. The ball is in Iran's court,"
a spokesman for the ministry said, speaking
on condition of anonymity in line with
policy.
The United States and its allies want Iran
to halt uranium enrichment, which they worry
could eventually lead to weapons-grade
material and the production of nuclear
weapons. Iran says its program is for
peaceful purposes — generating electricity
and producing medical radioisotopes to treat
cancer patients.
Negotiations between Iran and the
international envoys fell apart in January
2011, and Iran later rejected a plan to send
its stockpile of low-enriched uranium abroad
in exchange for reactor-ready fuel rods.
Ahmadinejad tried to turn the tables,
accusing the West of claiming to seek talks
but preferring failure as a way to further
punish Iran with what the Islamic Republic
has called "economic warfare."
"It is you who come up with excuses each
time and issue resolutions on the verge of
talks so that negotiations collapse,"
Ahmadinejad said. "It is evident that those
who resort to coercion are opposed to talks
and always bring pretexts and blame us
instead."
A U.N. nuclear agency team is expected to
visit Tehran on Saturday, the first such
mission since a report in November that
alleged Iran had conducted secret
weapons-related tests and that Tehran was on
the brink of developing a nuclear weapon.
The delegation from the International Atomic
Energy Agency will be led by Deputy Director
General Herman Nackaerts, who is in charge
of the Iran nuclear file.
Iran began uranium enrichment at a new
underground site built to withstand possible
airstrikes earlier this month, in another
show of defiance against Western pressure.
Centrifuges at the bunker-like Fordo
facility near the holy city of Qom are
churning out uranium enriched to 20 percent.
That level is higher than the 3.5 percent
being made at Iran's main enrichment plant
at Natanz, central Iran, and can be turned
into warhead material faster and with less
work.
Iran says it won't give up its right to
enrich uranium and produce nuclear fuel, but
it has offered to allow IAEA inspectors to
visit its nuclear sites to ensure that the
program won't be weaponized.
Ahmadinejad also claimed the sanctions and
oil embargo will backfire because it has
minimum trade with the EU.
"Americans have not purchased Iranian oil
for 30 years. Our central bank has had no
dealings with them ... our (total) foreign
trade is about $200 billion. Between $23
billion to $24 billion of our trade is with
Europeans, making up about 10 percent of our
total trade ... Iran won't suffer,"
Ahmadinejad said in comments posted on state
TV's website.
The EU had been importing about 450,000
barrels of oil a day from Iran, making up 18
percent of Iran's oil exports.
In China, a major buyer of Iranian oil, the
official Xinhua News Agency quoted the
Foreign Ministry as opposing the latest EU
measures on Iran.
"To blindly pressure and impose sanctions on
Iran are not constructive approaches," the
statement said.
Beijing has pressed for the nuclear standoff
to be resolved through dialogue and
consultation.
Oil prices — which rose about $100 a barrel
Thursday — have been nudged higher this week
on Western naval buildups in the Gulf and
Iran's threats to close the oil tanker lanes
through the Strait of Hormuz, the route for
about one-fifth the world's crude.
On Iran's southern coast, a fighter jet
crashed after a technical malfunction, the
semiofficial Fars news agency reported. The
U.S.-made F-14 went down outside Bushehr, a
port city that is also the site of Iran's
first nuclear power plant. Iran has an aging
warplane fleet that includes many
American-made aircraft, including F-14s,
purchased before the 1979 Islamic
Revolution.
Meanwhile, a 22-year-old Afghan man has been
sentenced to 16 years in prison for spying
on his country for neighboring Iran, an
Afghan official in Herat said Thursday. The
two countries have significant cultural and
economic ties, and Iran maintains a
consulate in the western city.
Photographs of foreign and Afghan military
installations and notebooks containing the
phone numbers of Iranian intelligence
officials were seized when Mahmood, who uses
only one name, was arrested four months ago
in his native Herat, according to the
official, who spoke on condition of
anonymity to discuss the sensitive case.
Mahmood, who shouted his innocence during an
hour-long trial Tuesday in Herat, has said
that he plans to appeal his sentence to a
higher court, the official said.
___
Murphy reported from Dubai, United Arab
Emirates. Associated Press writers Deb
Riechmann in Kabul, Afghanistan, and David
Stringer in London contributed to this
report.
Associated Press
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