Tough Iran enters nuclear bout with world powers
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad attends a meeting with Turkeys Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan in Istanbul December 22, 2010. Reuters Photo
TEHRAN: A defiant Iran on Friday is to enter fresh nuclear talks with the six world powers showing no signs of a softening of Tehrans hardline stance on its controversial atomic programme.
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and other top officials have raised the nuclear rhetoric in the run-up, as Tehran faces Western allegations that it is making an atom bomb, a charge the Islamic republic denies.
They say: We want negotiation You are free to choose the path (of either cooperation or confrontation), but bear in mind that by adopting the old path (of confrontation), you will face a more scandalous defeat, Ahmadinejad told a cheering crowd on Wednesday in the city of Yazd.
You could not stop us from being nuclear The Iranian nation will not retreat an inch. The nuclear issue is over from the Iranian point of view.
His outburst came as Iran prepares to sit with the six world powers Britain, China, France, Russia, the United States and Germany on Friday and Saturday in Istanbul to discuss Tehrans nuclear programme.
Irans atomic chief Ali Akbar Salehi has gone a step further, insisting Tehran will not even discuss its nuclear dossier at the Istanbul meeting, which is the top agenda for the world powers.
Salehi also said the Islamic republic is pushing ahead very strongly with its uranium enrichment programme, the most controversial part of its nuclear drive.
But observers say Iran has always taken a hardline stance ahead of nuclear talks.
Its position is now backed by progress in the atomic field be it inc! reasing the stock of enriched uranium or raising the level of enrichment itself to 20 percent despite UN and Western protests.
Irans nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili, has likened the defence of Tehrans position to standing up for the rights of all signatories of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
The Islamic Republic of Iran will not retreat one iota from its (nuclear) rights, Jalili, who is to lead Tehrans delegation in Istanbul, told a group of foreign envoys after they toured two of Irans atomic sites last week.
His hardline stance comes despite Irans key allies Russia and China snubbing the Islamic republic by rejecting the invitation to visit the nuclear facilities.
A European diplomat told AFP on condition of anonymity that the opening of the sites, including the main uranium enrichment plant at Natanz, to foreign envoys days before the Istanbul talks was a smart tactical move by Iran and one aimed at dividing the world powers.
But Iran too must have been surprised when Russia and China refused to be part of it.
Moscow and Beijing had also backed a fourth set of UN sanctions against Tehran in June.
Iranian analysts say it is Tehrans strategy to try to lessen the focus on the controversy around its nuclear programme during such dialogues with the world powers.
Iran does not want its nuclear file to be number one issue on the negotiating table, Mohammad Saleh Sedghian, head of the Tehran-based Arabic Centre for Iranian Studies, told AFP.
What Iran wants is to focus on common issues and once it reaches a desired result on that, it may then allow the talks to cover its nuclear file.
His views were echoed by a top aide to Jalili, Abolfazl Zohrevand, who said the Istanbul talks should focus on global nuclear disarmament, non-proliferation and nuclear cooperation.
If the West wants to deal with Irans nuclear case separately, Istanbul will not be its place, because Irans nuclear programme is transparent and supervised by the agency (International A! tomic En ergy Agency), he said.
Sedghian said Tehrans increasingly hardline stand was also the result of a lack of trust in the West, with US Secretary of State Hillary Clintons visit to the Gulf earlier this month deepening suspicions in Iranian minds.
Clinton toured the Arab states in the Gulf, urging them to stay focused on sanctions against Iran and assessing that despite close economic ties with Tehran they had been very responsive to enforcing punitive measures.
Sedghian said the key lay in trust to achieve a breakthrough.
Both sides need to win each others trust, and in order to achieve it both sides need to make concessions, he said. The trip made by Ms Clinton to the region did not help.
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