Gates Rebuffs Calls for Diplomacy with Iran

A01946021.jpgTEHRAN (FNA)- US Defense Secretary Robert Gates rebuffed calls for diplomatic engagement with Iran Tuesday.

Gates said the United States may have missed an opportunity to engage Iran in 2003 to 2004, but Iran under Ahmadinejad has experienced “a resurgence of the original hardline views of the Islamic revolutionaries.”

Speaking before the defense subcommittee of the Senate Appropriations Committee, Gates said he believed talks with Iran would prove futile.

Gates came under sharp questioning from Republican Senator Arlen Specter about the administration’s refusal to reach out diplomatically to Iran and its insistence that Tehran must first give up its right of uranium enrichment.

The issue arose last week when President George W. Bush told the Israeli Knesset that negotiations with “terrorists and radicals” amounted to “appeasement,” sparking an angry response from Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama.

On the same day, Gates appeared to depart from the White House position in a talk with a foreign policy group that seemed to advocate creating a combination of incentives and pressures on Tehran to gain leverage for negotiations.

But Gates told lawmakers on Tuesday that he believed stepped up pressure on Tehran was the way to gain leverage.

“I think the key here is developing leverage either through economic, or diplomatic or military pressures on the Iranian government so they believe they must have talks with the United States because there is something they want from us, which is the relief from the pressure,” Gates said.

But Specter questioned the US approach.

“Isn’t it sensible to engage in discussions with somebody to find out what it is they are after? We sit apart from them and we speculate,” the senator from Pennsylvania said.

Gates, who once advocated talks with Tehran, said there may have been a missed opportunity in 2003 and 2004 in the immediate aftermath of the US invasion of Iraq when Mohammed Khatami was Iran’s president.

Senator Dianne Feinstein, a Democrat from California who also sits on the Senate Intelligence Committee, also said “the fate of the area depends on talks with Iran’s top officials”.

“And I think saber-rattling and talking about exercises for military intrusions do nothing but escalate the situation,” she said.

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