Iran announces Iran announced on Sunday fresh talks with world powers on its nuclear drive and said it was open to an offer from arch-foe the United States for two-way discussions if Washington's intention was "authentic".
Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said the six world powers planned to resume talks in Kazakhstan on February 25 and he insisted Iran had never pulled back from the negotiations.
"I have good news, I've heard yesterday that 5+1 or EU3+3 will be meeting in Kazakhstan 25th of February," Salehi said during a panel discussion at the Munich Security Conference.
Iran and six world powers -- the U.S., China, Russia, Britain, France and Germany -- held three rounds of talks last year aimed at easing the standoff over Iran's nuclear activities, which Tehran insists are peaceful.
The six, known as the P5+1 or EU3+3, called on Iran to roll back its program but stopped short of meeting Tehran's demands to scale back sanctions and the last round ended in stalemate in June in Moscow.
Since then, talks have been held up over disagreements on their location.
The new date for talks has not been confirmed by the office of the EU foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, who represents the P5+1 group.
"It was not us who has stepped back. But anyway we still are very hopeful," Salehi said.
He added that Iran took comments by U.S. officials, including Vice President Joe Biden who said at the Munich conference on Saturday that Washington was ready to hold talks with Iran on its nuclear program, "with positive consideration".
Washington ruptured diplomatic ties with Iran in the wake of the 1979 revolution and relations remain hostile.
"We have no red line for negotiations, bilateral negotiations when it comes to negotiating over a particular subject," Salehi said.
"If the subject is the nuclear file, yes we are ready for negotiation but we have to make sure... that the other side this time comes with authentic intention with a fair and real intention to resolve the issue," he said.
But he criticized as contradictory the desire for negotiation with Iran on the nuclear issue, while, on the other hand, the use of "threatening rhetorics that everything is on the table".
"If there is an honest intention on the other side, then we will take that into serious consideration," Salehi said.
Asked when direct U.S.-Iranian negotiations would happen, Biden told the conference on Saturday: "When the Iranian leadership, Supreme Leader, is serious."
"We have made it clear at the outset that... we would be prepared to meet bilaterally with the Iranian leadership," he said.
"That offer stands, but it must be real and tangible, and there has to be an agenda that they're prepared to speak to. We are not just prepared to do it for the exercise."
He said: "There is still time, there is still space for diplomacy, backed by pressure, to succeed. The ball is in the government of Iran's court, and it's well past time for Tehran to adopt a serious, good-faith approach to negotiations with the P5-plus-1."
Outgoing Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak called in Munich for a "strong political will by the world" on the nuclear issue.
"I was glad to hear yesterday Vice President Biden saying loud and clear containment is not an option," he told the conference.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, speaking just before the formal start of talks to build Israel's new ruling coalition, said the most important mission facing the new government was preventing a nuclear Iran.
"It is a mission which has become more complicated because Iran has equipped itself with new centrifuges which reduce the enrichment time," he said.
"We cannot live with this process."
It was the first official reaction since it emerged that Tehran was planning to install more modern equipment at the Natanz uranium enrichment plant in central Iran, according to a U.N. document seen by Agence France Presse in Vienna on Thursday.
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