Iranian presidential election frontrunner Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani said yesterday he was in favor of ending a quarter of a century of estrangement with the United States, but Washington needed to make the first move. "If they make a positive sign, I am one of those who believes that we need to sort out this problem," Rafsanjani said.
We haven't turned Iran into a large, slightly irridescent flat spot. Consider that the first move. Fatty. | "I am convinced that it is the Americans who need to show their goodwill so that relations can resume," the top cleric and former president was quoted as telling a gathering of university professors. "They need to deal with us as equals and renounce their animosity."
Y'all just keep on jumping up and down and spewing spittle and hollering about the Great Satan for now. We'll deal with you later. | Iran and the United States cut off diplomatic relations in 1980, after revolutionaries stormed the US Embassy in Tehran and held 52 US personnel hostage for 444 days. But Rafsanjani, seen as a savvy deal-maker who favors closer ties with the West, has been playing up the issue in the run-up to the June 17 presidential poll an apparent bid to draw support from many Iranians keen to see the US problem resolved.
'Nother words, it's all for internal consumption only. Somehow, I guessed that. | His comments came the day after he called on the 26-year-old Islamic government to undergo a radical rethink of the way it deals with the international community and how it relates with its own burgeoning youth population. "There are new demands. Nobody should think that we can act by employing the same literature, the same policies or the same attitudes that we had at the beginning of the revolution or at the end of the (Iran-Iraq) war," Rafsanjani said in a televised campaign broadcast. His comments were a marked departure from the usual stance from a government totally at odds with the United States and much of the international community and also in contrast to the perceived opposition of Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, to any talks of resuming ties with America. According to informal opinion polls in the Iranian press Rafsanjani currently leads the eight government-approved candidates hoping to succeed incumbent reformist President Mohammad Khatami. While Khatami has promoted detente and urged a "dialogue among civilizations", he has also failed to break the ice with Washington. |