US to Reach Out to Iran in Bid to Quell Iraq Unrest
Times of Oman:
President George W. Bush has asked US Ambassador to Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad to reach out to Iran for assistance in subduing the unrest in Iraq - the first high-level US contact with Tehran in decades, Newsweek magazine reported yesterday. "I've been authorised by the president to engage the Iranians," Khalilzad told Newsweek in its edition set to hit newsstands today. "There will be meetings, and that's also a departure and an adjustment," he said in an interview with the magazine.This is a risky venture as it will confuse the Iranian people seeking international support for real democracy in Iran. The people of Iran have an ongoing fear we will at some point cut a deal with the Iranian government that will leave the Islamic Republic in power. This will vonly heighten that fear.
ABC television confirmed the proposed US approach to Iran on its This Week programme yesterday, reporting that Khalilzad was to make direct contact with the Iranian government about the ongoing insurgency in Iraq.
The contact would be the first high-level communication at the senior level between Washington and Tehran since relations ruptured in 1979. READ MORE
Meanwhile, Britain, France and Germany agreed yesterday to hold talks with Iran on resuming negotiations which broke down in August about the countryÂs disputed nuclear programme, a British spokesman said.
"I can confirm that a letter has been written by the three foreign ministers offering to have talks about restarting the negotiations on the nuclear issue," a spokesman for Prime Minister Tony Blair said in Barcelona, where Blair was attending a Euro-Mediterranean summit.
Earlier Iran's official Irna news agency said ambassadors of the so-called EU3 countries handed over a letter accepting a resumption of the talks in December, quoting a statement issued by Iran's Supreme National Security Council.
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