Region | Iran
Kouchner says supports IAEA, Iran talks
Kouchner repeated in an interview with Thursday's Le Figaro daily that his recent remark that France needed to prepare for the prospect of war with Iran had been misunderstood, and said Paris could act as an intermediary between the West and Iran.
Paris: French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner has said he supports talks between Iran and the UN's nuclear watchdog about Tehran's atomic programme, but the dialogue should not drag on for years.
Kouchner repeated in an interview with Thursday's Le Figaro daily that his recent remark that France needed to prepare for the prospect of war with Iran had been misunderstood, and said Paris could act as an intermediary between the West and Iran.
Western powers led by the United States and France have criticised a deal by UN nuclear watchdog chief Mohamed El Baradei requiring Iran to answer questions about past secret
nuclear research but without touching its accelerating campaign to enrich atomic fuel.
Nevertheless, Kouchner told Le Figaro he was ready to give El Baradei the time he needed to visit Iran.
"We must absolutely give an accord between the West and Iran an extra chance -- on the basis of a suspension of its (Iran's) uranium enrichment programme," he said.
"But these discussions cannot go on for years -- we have to find a solution," he said, adding that some observers believed the latest deal with the IAEA was a way for "Iran to gain time".
Tehran denies it is secretly seeking nuclear weapons and says it only wants to generate electricity.
France has been calling for tougher UN sanctions against Iran. Kouchner has said they aimed at avoiding war and if the UN Security Council could not agree to punish Iran further, France would work on separate EU sanctions.
France, Britain, Germany, the United States, Russia and China are due to meet on Friday to discuss a possible third round of U.N. sanctions against Tehran for failing to suspend
sensitive nuclear work.
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