U.S.
says might talk to Iran about regional stability, cites Syria
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[April 21, 2015]
By Arshad Mohammed
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. State
Department said on Monday it might talk with Iran about promoting
regional stability, noting it had been open to including Iran in past
efforts to achieve a Syrian peace deal if Tehran had altered its policy.
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But it drew a distinction between talking to Iran about issues
beyond its nuclear program and actually working with Tehran on such
matters, something Washington has ruled out.
State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf made the comments when asked
about a call by Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif in a
New York Times opinion piece for regional dialogue to address the
crises in countries such as Iraq, Syria and Yemen.
Washington was put in an awkward position since it blames Tehran for
much of the instability and because it does not wish to upset Gulf
Arab allies who fear a nuclear deal being negotiated with Iran may
pave the way to a wider U.S.-Iranian entente.
The State Department appeared to be treading a careful line so as to
not shut the door entirely to dialogue with Iran while not
alienating Gulf Arab allies like Saudi Arabia, which believes Iran
is bent on regional domination.
Asked if the United States might discuss regional issues as it has
in the past with Iran if Tehran pursued policies more in line with
U.S. objectives, Harf replied: "Maybe."
She said Washington had been open to including Tehran in a second
round of Syria peace talks in 2014 had Iran embraced the 2012
"Geneva Communique," which called for a political transition, but
left ambiguous the fate of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
In the end, Iran did not sign on to the Geneva Communique and did
not participate in the January 2014 "Geneva II" meeting.
Harf sought to draw a distinction between the possibility of talking
to the Iranians and the reality of "working with" them, suggesting
that was a line Washington would not cross.
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"We've always said we won't be coordinating or working with the
Iranians, and there's a difference between discussing and working
with," she said.
The White House suggested that it viewed the Iranian foreign
minister's appeal as disingenuous, particularly regarding Yemen. The
United States says Iran has armed Yemen's Houthi rebels, who have
taken control of much of the country.
The debate over regional unrest comes against the backdrop of
negotiation between Iran and Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia
and the United States on a deal to curb Iran's nuclear program in
exchange for relief from economic sanctions.
Sunni-ruled Gulf Arab states fear that an accord would let Iran
devote more cash and energy to its Shi'ite proxies in Syria, Iraq,
Lebanon and Yemen, escalating those conflicts.
(Reporting by Arshad Mohammed; editing by David Storey and G Crosse)
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