Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said in an interview aired on US television on Monday that if the United States adopted a genuinely new approach to his country Teheran would respond in a positive way.
‘Today, we see new behaviour shown by the United States and the officials of the United States. My question is, is such behaviour rooted in a new approach?’ the president told NBC in a rare interview with a US broadcaster.
‘In other words, mutual respect, cooperation and justice? Or is this approach a continuation in the confrontation with the Iranian people, but in a new guise?’ he said from Teheran, speaking through an interpreter.
If US behaviour represented a genuine change, ‘we will be facing a new situation and the response by the Iranian people will be a positive one,’ Ahmadinejad said in the interview, conducted in the presidential compound.
Ahmadinejad's comments came after the United States took the unprecedented step of sending a top diplomat to meet Iran's chief negotiator at talks in Geneva over Teheran's disputed nuclear program.
The interview followed Ahmadinejad's announcement Saturday that Iran had boosted the number of uranium-enriching centrifuges to 6,000, in an expansion of its nuclear drive that defies international calls for a freeze.
Iran faces three sets of UN Security Council sanctions over its refusal to halt uranium enrichment, which makes nuclear fuel as well as the fissile core of an atomic bomb.
Ahmadinejad reiterated in the interview that Teheran did not intend to build nuclear weapons.
‘We are not working to manufacture a bomb. We don't believe in a nuclear bomb,’ he said when asked if Iran sought to be a nuclear power.
History has shown that possessing nuclear weapons did not help other countries with their political goals, he added.
‘Nuclear bombs belong to the 20th century. We are living in a new century,’ he said.
‘Nuclear energy is very beneficial and it is very clean by the way. All nations must use it. A bomb obviously is a very bad thing. Nobody should have such a bomb.’
However, the White House remained sceptical of Ahmadinejad's conciliatory tone.
‘I think we have to approach this with a big grain of salt. President Ahmadinejad said one thing to the Iranian people on Saturday and another thing to an American journalist on Monday,’ spokeswoman Dana Perino said.
‘So I think that all of us need to consider this with a healthy dose of scepticism.’
World powers, concerned Teheran is pursuing a clandestine nuclear weapons project, have offered to start pre-negotiations during which Teheran would face no further sanctions if it added no more uranium-enriching centrifuges.
Permanent UN Security Council members -- Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States -- plus Germany have made Iran an offer, which includes trade incentives and help with a civilian nuclear program in return for suspending enrichment.
Iran was given a two-week deadline to respond that expires on Saturday.
When asked about the proposal from Western powers that offers improved trade terms and other incentives, Ahmadinejad said Iran was a ‘mighty country’ and not at all isolated.
‘For the continuation of our lives and for progress, we do not need the services, if I can use the word, of a few countries,’ he said.
The United States has warned Teheran of ‘punitive measures’ if it spurns the offer and presses on with enrichment.
Meanwhile on Monday, Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak met in Washington with US Defence Secretary Robert Gates for talks that an Israeli adviser said would focus on the threat posed by Iran's nuclear program.
Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman confirmed that the talks took place for about an hour and described them as ‘part of standard defence consultations.&rsquo
Despite Ahmadinejad's relatively moderate words, the State Department said it was looking out for a clear, official statement of policy ahead of Saturday's deadline.
‘We are waiting for what we believe to be a definitive statement from the government of Iran, we are looking for it to come through the traditional channel,’ State Department spokesman Gonzalo Gallegos said.
‘And then, it will be reviewed and then, we will decide where we will be going from there,’ he told reporters.
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