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Obama to Iran: U.S. offer of dialogue still stands

Posted by Zand-Bon on Mar 20th, 2010 and filed under INTERNATIONAL NEWS FOCUS, News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

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March 20, 2010

U.S. President Barack Obama renewed his administration’s offer of dialogue and diplomacy with Tehran on Saturday, a year after his offer of a new beginning with Iran failed to achieve concrete results.

Obama, who addressed Iranians in a new videotaped appeal to mark the observance of Nowruz — an ancient festival celebrating the arrival of spring — has pledged to pursue aggressive sanctions to prevent Iran from getting a nuclear weapon.

“We are working with the international community to hold the Iranian government accountable because they refuse to live up to their international obligations,” Obama said in the address, according to excerpts released by the White House.

“But our offer of comprehensive diplomatic contacts and dialogue stands,” he said.

Iran, which has refused to halt its uranium enrichment program, denies it is seeking to build a nuclear bomb and says its nuclear program is aimed at generating electricity.

Obama said Washington was committed to a “more hopeful” future for the Iranian people despite U.S. differences with Iran’s government.

During his first year in office, Obama marked Nowruz with a then-unprecedented message offering Iran a “new beginning” of diplomatic engagement with the United States.

But Tehran rebuffed Obama’s gesture and relations soured further when Iranian authorities cracked down on opposition protesters after a disputed election last June, drawing U.S. condemnation.

“Over the course of the last year, it is the Iranian government that has chosen to isolate itself, and to choose a self-defeating focus on the past over a commitment to build a better future,” Obama said.

“Even as we continue to have differences with the Iranian government, we will sustain our commitment to a more hopeful future for the Iranian people,” he said.

FOCUS ON PEOPLE, SANCTIONS

Obama said the United States was increasing opportunities for educational exchanges for Iranian students to study at U.S. colleges and universities as well as working to increase access to Internet technology so Iranians could “communicate with each other, and with the world, without fear of censorship.”

Obama’s openness to engaging diplomatically with Iran if it “unclenched its fist” broke with the previous administration’s policy of seeking to isolate the Islamic Republic, which President George W. Bush branded part of an “axis of evil.”

Obama has not ruled out any options in dealing with Iran, the world’s fifth-largest crude oil exporter, but U.S. officials have repeatedly made clear that their preferred option is diplomacy, given the difficulty of enforcing sanctions and the risk that military action could cause wider conflict.

The United States has agreed with Britain, France and Germany on a draft proposal for a fourth round of sanctions that would place new restrictions on Iranian banks and target the Revolutionary Guard and firms linked to it.

Washington has been struggling to win over China and Russia, both veto-wielding members of the U.N. Security Council and key allies of Iran, to agree to more aggressive sanctions.

In a development on Friday, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin told visiting U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton that Russian support for a new U.N. sanctions resolution was possible.

The United States, anxious not to undermine growing domestic opposition to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s government, has emphasized that any sanctions will be aimed at Iran’s government, not its people.

“I want the Iranian people to know what my country stands for. The United States believes in the dignity of every human being, and an international order that bends the arc of history in the direction of justice,” Obama said.

He said the United States wanted “a future where Iranians can exercise their rights, to participate fully in the global economy, and enrich the world through educational and cultural exchanges beyond Iran’s borders. That is the future that we seek. That is what America is for.”

(Editing by )

2 Responses for “Obama to Iran: U.S. offer of dialogue still stands”

  1. says:

    Barack Obama’s book, “The Audacity of Hope,” shows a catchy title. It has an idea of bravery mixed with full confidence. There’s nothing Pollyanna about this. I may not support every part he says, but he’s our president, and for me, he inspires confidence. Which can do more for any region than any number of backroom deals. Hope gives us energy, and energy sustains us through trying times. Boy, we’ve had them. I’m from West Texas, and I did not vote for Bush. When McCain ran against Obama, I used to be a citizen of Arizona, but I gave audacious hope a chance. The fight for progress and laying the foundations of prosperity is not over. I’ve come across the quips of those who don’t believe Obama is able to do it. But step back a moment. Would anyone have most of us fail just to tarnish the star of an incumbent for whom they did not vote? Trying to keep our priorities straight, let’s work together with this president and build our future.

  2. Beli says:

    Oh yeah, I’D LOOOVE to see if you’d say that if it was your people he was selling out Weiss-Devin. You Americans are SO blind, fat and happy, and totally willfully ignorant to the fact that people around the world don’t live the lives you lead and that is why you are so unpopular…because of your facade as caring folks but you are clueless and don’t want to really know when push comes to shove. So please do not lecture us Iranians about your call for people to work with him! What nerve…like we’re waiting for our marching orders from yet another American who lives in Never-Never land.

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