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Iran remains wary on Trump offer of talks

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Tehran: There was some hope and a lot of scepticism in Iran on Tuesday after US President Donald Trump offered talks, with the country’s leaders refraining from a quick response.


An adviser to President Hassan Rouhani said any talks had to start with Washington returning to the 2015 nuclear deal it abandoned in May. Trump said on Monday that he was willing to meet “any time” with Iran’s leaders without preconditions.


“I would meet with Iran if they wanted to meet,” Trump said at a White House press conference, barely a week after he had traded bellicose threats with Rouhani.


But with the US about to reimpose full sanctions, starting on August 6, many in Iran are uninterested in his latest volte-face.


“He must first return to the nuclear deal and implement it before negotiating can even be contemplated,” said analyst Mohammad Marandi, of the University of Tehran, who was part of the nuclear negotiating team.


“We cannot negotiate with someone who violates international commitments, threatens to destroy countries, and constantly changes his position,” he added.


Others in Iran were more receptive. “Negotiations with the United States must not be a taboo,” said Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh, head of parliament’s foreign affairs commission, in an interview with the semi-official ISNA news agency.


On the streets of Tehran, meanwhile, the focus remained resolutely on domestic problems — particularly the collapse of the currency and ongoing economic difficulties. “Any little thing that can help the people in this bad situation, I really want it to happen for us,” said Fathi, a young woman working for an insurance broker. “All of us believe that Trump is the enemy of Iran and Iranian people.


But now maybe Trump wants to give the Iranian people an opportunity and, God willing, it could be a way to get past our disastrous situation,” added Hushiar, an office manager in her 50s.


The imminent return of full sanctions has raised fears the country will tip into a major economic crisis, with the currency already losing two-thirds of its value since the start of the year. Many Iranians find it hard to believe that the man who is trying to destroy their economy, and has banned them from flying to the US, can be trusted.


“If they are honest in their words that they want to have negotiations with us without any preconditions, at least they should stay in the JCPOA (nuclear deal) or they should let us get the benefits of European trade,” said Morteza Mehdian, a software engineer in his 20s. — AFP


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