Nuclear negotiator: Iran ready for talks with West

TEHRAN, Iran — Iran’s top nuclear negotiator said his country is ready to hold talks with world powers to ease fears over its nuclear activities and has prepared a revised package of proposals for Western countries, state TV reported today.

Despite the suggestion of possible international cooperation, parliament sent a defiant message to the world by supporting President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s nominee for defense minister, who is under an international arrest warrant for the 1994 bombing of a Jewish center in Argentina that killed 85 people.

Nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili told reporters of the country’s new proposals a day before a meeting in Germany of the six countries trying to address concerns about Iran’s nuclear program — the U.S., France, Britain, Russia, China and Germany.

“Iran has prepared to present its revised package of proposals … and is ready to hold talks with world powers … in order to ease common concerns in the international arena,” the TV quoted Jalili as telling reporters.

The U.S. has given Iran a deadline of the end of September to take up an offer of nuclear talks with six world powers and enjoy trade incentives should it suspend uranium enrichment activities. If not, Iran could face harsher sanctions.

Tehran in the past said its new proposals deal with political and economic issues as well as security and international affairs but did not say how it would address Western concerns that its nuclear program is a cover to build atomic weapons.

The U.S. and its European allies want to draw Iran back into negotiations over its nuclear program. At the G-8 summit in Italy in July, President Barack Obama said there was a September “time frame” for Iran to respond to offers to discuss its nuclear program.

The five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany offered Iran a modified package of economic incentives June last year in return for suspending its uranium enrichment activities or face harsher sanctions.

Iran has repeatedly vowed it will never suspend enrichment work but said the incentives package has some “common ground” with Tehran’s own proposals for a resolution to the standoff.

The U.S. accuses Iran of using its civilian nuclear program as a cover to develop nuclear weapons and wants it to stop enriching uranium, a process used to produce fuel for reactors that can also be a pathway to weapons production. Iran has denied the accusations, saying its nuclear is peaceful and is aimed at generating electricity, not bomb.

Ahmadinejad, whose disputed June 12 re-election prompted deadly street protests, referred in April to a package to be presented to the West.

Also today, the conservative-dominated parliament showed its support for Ahmadinejad’s nominee for defense minister, Gen. Ahmad Vahidi. He is wanted by Argentina in the bombing of a Jewish cultural center in Buenos Aires.

His nomination has already drawn an outcry from Argentina and Jewish groups. But Iranian lawmakers hailed him as a hero with cries of “Death to Israel” as he addressed the chamber today. The support raises the likelihood Vahidi will be confirmed as defense chief when parliament votes on the entire Cabinet list on Wednesday.

Vahidi is one of five prominent Iranians sought by Argentina in the bombing, which killed 85 people. He was the commander of a special unit of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard known as the Quds Force at the time of the attack.

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