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Khamenei
suggests US ties possible in future
TEHRAN—Iran’s supreme leader said on Thursday restoring ties with the
United States now would harm the Islamic state, but he did not rule it
out in the future. “Not having relations with America is one of our main
policies but we have never said this relationship should be cut
forever,” Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in a speech in the central
province of Yazd, state television reported.
“Certainly, the day when having relations with America is useful for the
nation I will be the first one to approve this relationship.” Khamenei,
Iran’s highest authority, also made clear Tehran would not suspend
atomic work the West suspects Iran wants to master so it can build
nuclear bombs. Iran says its program is aimed at generating electricity.
“The Iranian nation in 20 years needs to have at least 20,000 megawatt
of nuclear electricity,” he said, referring to plans to build a network
of nuclear power plants in the world’s fourth-largest oil producer. The
United States cut ties with Tehran shortly after Iran’s 1979 Islamic
Revolution. The two countries are at odds over Tehran’s atomic ambitions
and also disagree over who is to blame for the violence in Iraq.
Khamenei, who like other Iranian leaders often rails against the West,
suggested the example of Iraq showed the United States would remain a
“danger” even if the two countries had relations. “Establishing this
relationship now would be harmful for us and naturally we shouldn’t
follow it,” he said.
Iranian and U.S. officials eased a diplomatic freeze lasting almost
three decades by holding three rounds of talks in Baghdad since May, but
discussion was limited to Iraq.
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said last month Washington was
open to better relations with Iran if it halted its nuclear work,
something Tehran has repeatedly refused to do.
Khamenei rejected the suggestion by Washington and Moscow that Iran
should stop nuclear uranium enrichment after Russia began delivering
fuel in December to Iran’s first nuclear power plant in Bushehr. “This
is like telling a country with huge oil reserves that it should provide
for its oil needs from abroad,” he said.
Enriched uranium can be used as fuel for power plants but also, if
refined much further, provide material for bombs. Khamenei said Iran’s
temporary suspension of nuclear enrichment in 2003, under former
President Mohammad Khatami, had shown the West’s promises were “empty”
and he suggested he had intervened to resume the program.
The United States is pushing for a third round of U.N. sanctions against
Iran for not halting enrichment, even though a U.S. national
intelligence estimate last month said Iran had stopped its nuclear
weapons program in 2003. Iranian officials say the country needs
domestic nuclear fuel production for other power plants it wants to
build so that it can export more of its oil and gas.
Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on Thursday that Iran sees
“no benefit” in resuming ties with the United States at the moment but
does not rule out a resumption of relations in the future. In his most
significant speech on foreign policy in several months, Khamenei also
vowed that Iran would not halt sensitive work on its controversial
nuclear programme as demanded by the West.
“Cutting ties with the United States is one of our basic policies. We
have never said that they will be cut for ever,” Khamenei told students
in a speech in the central city of Yazd. “The conditions of the US
government are such now that it is harmful for us to resume relations,”
he said, describing the United States as a global “danger”.—Agencies
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