Iran says would welcome Obama talks: report

Iran would welcome talks between President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and U.S. President-elect Barack Obama, the country”s vice president said in an interview with Japan”s Kyodo news agency Vice President Esfandiar Rahim Mashaie said in the interview in Tokyo that any such meeting must be held in an open manner and its contents made public, the agency […]

Reuters

Iran would welcome talks between President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and U.S. President-elect Barack Obama, the country”s vice president said in an interview with Japan”s Kyodo news agency

Vice President Esfandiar Rahim Mashaie said in the interview in Tokyo that any such meeting must be held in an open manner and its contents made public, the agency said.

Mashaie told Kyodo the Iranian president had said “direct diplomacy is the best way to peace,” but added that Obama must distance himself from Washington”s stance so far in order to implement change, Kyodo said.

Iran has repeatedly refused to bow to Western pressure to halt its nuclear program, which many fear is aimed at making nuclear weapons. Obama this month called for an international effort to stop Tehran from developing a nuclear bomb.

“Mr. Obama stands at a historically significant crossroads, but there are only two paths for him — one which leads to good results through ”change” as promised in his slogan, the other with extremely grave consequences if he continues the same policies as previous administrations,” Mashaie told Kyodo.

Iran said on Wednesday it was running 5,000 uranium enrichment centrifuges, signaling an expansion of work it says is aimed at generating electricity.

Analysts believe Iran could be as little as one or two years from stockpiling enough enriched uranium to use for a bomb.

Tehran says it wants to generate electricity to enable it to export more of its oil and gas.

Article translations:

Related Articles

Оби зулол

Most Read

Join us on social media!

Recent Articles

The plan to launch the CASA-1000 project in 2027 discussed in Dushanbe

The Ministry of Energy of Tajikistan, Afghan DABS, and other project participants held a series of meetings.

Axios: Iran agrees to continue talks with the US, but the date remains uncertain

At the same time, the truce between the countries is set to expire within the next 24 hours.

Asian champions were welcomed as heroes: Tajik judokas received 100,000 somoni each

The Tajikistan national team returned from the Asian championship with five medals, securing second place in the overall team standings.

Karakalpakstan in Uzbekistan declared special mining zone with tax holidays

Its residents are exempt from taxes and duties until January 1, 2035.

A school student saves a girl who jumped into the river in Dushanbe

The injured person was taken to the hospital, and the young man will be awarded.

Tajikistan ranked at the bottom of the global employment index

Only a third of working-age citizens in the republic have employment.