Iran is prepared to negotiate a suspension of its most sensitive nuclear work if it receives fair guarantees in talks with major powers, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said this evening.
He told a news conference at the United Nations headquarters in New York that talks with the European Union on Iran's nuclear program were on the right track and he hoped no one would try to sabotage them, an apparent reference to the United States.
"We believe those negotiations are moving on the right path. Hopefully others will not disrupt the work - in small ways perhaps. We think it is a constructive path to take," he said.
Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
Responding to a UN Security Council demand that Iran suspend uranium enrichment, which can produce fuel for power stations or bombs, he said Tehran was prepared to discuss such a move but gave no time-frame for doing so.
"We have said that under fair conditions and just conditions we will negotiate about it," the president said.
While there have been hints at progress in recent talks between Iran and EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana, this was the most explicit statement by an Iranian leader that Tehran is seriously considering complying with the key condition for talks on broad cooperation with the West.
After Iran ignored a UN deadline to halt enrichment by August 31st, foreign ministers of the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany agreed this week to give Mr Solana until early October to reach a deal with Tehran on terms for starting talks, diplomats said.
If Iran did not agree to suspend enrichment at that point, the six powers would seek UN sanctions on Iran, they said.
Mr Ahmadinejad insisted that Iran's nuclear program was peaceful and fully open to inspection and asked why the United States supported other states in his region which were known to make nuclear weapons, an apparent reference to Israel, Pakistan and India.
Following up the main thrust of his UN General Assembly speech on Tuesday, Mr Ahmadinejad questioned the legitimacy of the Security Council to sit in judgment on others when its own members were involved in "oppression".