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Iran’s Tone Changes in Istanbul: Nuke Talks ‘Constructive and Useful’

Friday, April 20, 2012   (0 Comments)
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 From the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars - www.wilsoncenter.org
 
Apr 15, 2012

Iran and the six world powers seeking to negotiate with it took a step back from confrontation Saturday when they reopened talks after an almost year and a half break. The discussions in Istanbul went well, both sides said, as they focused on the disputed Iranian nuclear program. The two sides agreed to meet again—in Baghdad on May 23.

It was a turning point at a time of increasing tensions with Iran over its alleged pursuit of nuclear weapons. This is true even though there was no agreement on measures to take and neither side made proposals. EU foreign policy representative Catherine Ashton, who speaks for the so-called P5 plus 1 negotiating team of Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States called the discussion "constructive and useful.” The word "constructive” was significant. The test of the talks had been to see if Iran, which claims its program is a drive to use the atom peacefully, would talk seriously about nuclear matters.

The idea was to get started on talks that had a chance of succeeding. Said Ashton: "We want now to move to a sustained process of serious dialogue, where we can take urgent practical steps to build confidence and lead on to compliance by Iran with all its international obligations.” This "step-by-step approach” with "reciprocity” of rewards for compliance is designed to "lead to concrete steps towards a comprehensive negotiated solution which restores international confidence in the exclusively peaceful nature of the Iranian nuclear program,” Ashton said in a final statement after the intense 10 hours of talks, during which Iran rejected a request for a bilateral meeting with US representative Undersecretary of State Wendy Sherman. Iranian negotiator Saeed Jalili did meet separately with the Russian envoy Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov.

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