Iran Warns West Over ‘Hypocritical Behavior’
TEHRAN -- Iran’s foreign minister Hussein Amir-Abdollahian on Wednesday stressed that the “window to reach an agreement” in Vienna will not remain open forever, urging other parties to be realistic.
Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of the two-day visit to Muscat during which he met top-ranking Omani officials including the Sultan of Oman, he said Tehran welcomes any initiative “to reach a good, strong and stable agreement.”
“The window to reach an agreement on the part of the Islamic Republic of Iran will not be open always,” the top Iranian diplomat asserted, adding that the window will be shut if the opposite parties, especially the Americans, continue to behave hypocritically and unrealistically.
“We haven’t closed (the window), but if the Westerners want to continue their hypocritical and interventionist behavior, we will move in another direction,” he added.
Amir-Abdollahian said he spoke to the European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borell on the sidelines of the second Baghdad summit in Jordan last week, and his deputy and chief nuclear negotiator Ali Bagheri Kani also had a conversation with EU’s coordinator for talks, Enrique Mora.
He said the two sides exchanged views and arrived at some “agreements” in order to resume the stalled talks in the Austrian capital aimed at the removal of sanctions and revival of the 2015 nuclear deal.
The marathon talks in Vienna, underway since April last year, have remained stalled since August over foot-dragging by the United States and refusal to provide necessary guarantees to Iran.
The “politically manipulated” actions of the UN nuclear agency and the probe into so-called “uranium traces” found at “three undeclared sites” have also emerged as a key obstacle.
Iran maintains that the measures taken by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) have been at the behest of the Zionist regime and the Western states to seek leverage in ongoing nuclear talks.
Amir-Abdollahian insisted that Tehran will not agree to “negotiations for the sake of negotiations” but to reach a strong and stable agreement that takes into account Iran’s interests.
The minister described Oman as the “main mediator” between Iran and the Western parties from the beginning, adding that Muscat continues to make efforts to revive the talks and the deal.
Following his meeting with the Sultan of Oman, the top Iranian diplomat said he was pleased to know he had worked in the field of diplomacy for many years, adding that regional issues figured in their talks.