July 02, 2008

McClatchy's Warren Strobel:

Iran's senior diplomat said Tuesday that Tehran was seriously considering a new offer from six world powers to resolve the dispute over its nuclear program, and he praised the package as "constructive."

The unusually positive remarks by Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki to a small group of reporters raised hope that a negotiated solution can be found to defuse the crisis.

The U.N. Security Council has demanded that Iran suspend the enrichment of uranium that can be used for nuclear weapons, and the Bush administration has refused direct talks with Iran until it meets that condition.

During a 90-minute luncheon at Iran's United Nations mission, Mottaki dismissed the growing speculation that Israel or the United States will strike at Iran's nuclear facilities during President Bush's last six months in office.

He described news reports to that effect as part of a long-running campaign of "psychological warfare."

The chance that Israel will attack Iran "is almost nil," Mottaki said. As for a U.S. strike, he said there was little public support in this country for a new conflict. "The consequences of such an attack cannot be predicted," he said.

Yet there are signs of intensified debate within Iran's leadership about its nuclear program. Iran has long said that it has an inalienable right to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes. But Mottaki declined three opportunities to reiterate that position Tuesday, indicating that Iran is weighing its options.

"We are seriously and carefully examining" the proposal, Mottaki said....

More here and here.

Update: Barbara Slavin, a senior fellow at the U.S. Institute of Peace, and author of "Bitter Friends, Bosom Enemies: Iran, the U.S. and the Twisted Path to Confrontation," was also at the Mottaki lunch, and comments:

At a luncheon today with about a dozen journalists at the iranian mission in new york, foreign minister mottaki did not repeat iran's contention that enrichment is Iran's legitimate right... even when repeatedly prodded to do so. Mottaki said that the proposal made by Iran last month to the U.N. secretary general and the P-5 plus 1 proposal put forward by Solana had enough in common to form the basis for an agenda for talks... It could be that the Iranians are just stalling but it also could be that they are getting ready to accept the Solana proposal....

A U.S. official adds on above developments, "No one is holding their breath, but at the same time we have to be prepared to accept yes for an answer from the Iranians."

Posted by Laura at July 2, 2008 12:42 AM