http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/000200609170301.htm
 
European diplomats consider holding meeting with Iran, without U.S. 
Washington, Sept. 17 (AP): European diplomats are considering a meeting with
Iran on the sidelines of next week's U.N. General Assembly in hopes of
de-escalating the standoff over Tehran's nuclear program -- but the United
States won't be getting an invitation. 
The Bush administration, which is pushing for U.N. sanctions against Iran,
has said it will join European-led negotiations with Iran only if Tehran
stops its uranium enrichment work first. 
That has led European negotiators to work on having a meeting -- without the
U.S. -- in which Iran could say it is temporarily suspending enrichment
activities because new negotiations had indeed begun. 
A U.S. official confirmed that European diplomats were contemplating the
meeting, but White House spokeswoman Emily Lawrimore would say only that
President George W. Bush has consistently supported talks with Iran, led by
Britain, France and Germany. ``He is hopeful that ongoing negotiations will
encourage the Iranian government to suspend its enrichment and reprocessing
activities,'' she said. 
The U.S. official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the
volatile nature of the discussions, said the Bush administration is not
expecting that such a meeting would be a major turning point in the dispute.
The Bush administration has little confidence that ``Iran will come through
to meet the conditions'' of verifiably suspending its enrichment work, the
official said. 
At a news conference Friday, Bush said he will send a signal at the United
Nations that the United States will not tolerate delay tactics by Tehran.
``Stalling shouldn't be allowed,'' Bush said. 
Bush also stressed that he believes there is a strong consensus in the
international community to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon,
although Russia and China -- two members of the U.N. Security Council that
have veto power -- have been hesitant about imposing U.N. sanctions against
the Iranian government. 
Javier Solana, the European Union's foreign policy chief, is to meet Sunday
in New York with Ali Larijani, Iran's chief nuclear negotiator. If their
discussion goes well, then the meeting _ without the U.S. -- could be
arranged, the U.S. official said. 
The idea would be to schedule such a meeting ahead of another gathering on
Tuesday night that is being attended by representatives of the five
permanent members of the U.N. Security Council and a few other nations. In
that meeting, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is poised to push for
more clarity about sanctions that could be imposed on Iran. 
``Absent that change in the status quo, our plan is to push ahead on
Tuesday,'' the U.S. official said. 


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