Backgrounder: Munich Security
Conference
Special: The 45th annual Munich
Security Conference
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Ali Larijani, member of the Supreme
National Security Council of Iran, faces the media after his speech at the
Munich Conference on Security Policy, Sicherheitskonferenz, at the hotel
'Bayerischer Hof' in Munich , southern Germany, Friday, Feb. 6 ,
2009.(Xinhua/AFP Photo) Photo
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MUNICH, Germany, Feb. 6 (Xinhua) -- Iranian
Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani on Friday urged the new U.S. administration to
change policies toward Iran and admit past "wrongdoings" before dialogue and
reconciliation could be realized between the two
countries. "The carrot and stick policy (toward
Iran) must be dropped," said Larijani at the three-day Munich Security
Conference, which opened Friday afternoon. "Over the past years, the U.S. has
burned many bridges but the new government can rebuild them ... if it accepts
its mistakes and changes its policies."
New American President Barack Obama has expressed his
willingness to talk to Iran, but Larijani had ruled out direct talks with the
U.S. delegation on the sidelines of the Munich event.
The United States severed its ties with Iran in 1980.
Since then, Washington has been trying to beef up its sanctions against Tehran
for being involved in anti-U.S. coalition forces activities and for allegedly
developing nuclear weapons secretly.
Iran denied the charges and insisted that its nuclear
program is for peaceful purposes only.
Larijani accused Washington of practicing "double
standards" onthe nuclear issue, citing that Washington had not put any sanctions
on Pakistan and India which have recently become member of the nuclear club. He
also said America had not criticized Israel for "developing nuclear weapons."
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Ali Larijani, member of the supreme
national security council of Iran waves before the start of the 45th
Conference on Security Policy in Munich Feb. 6, 2009.(Xinhua/Reuters
Photo) Photo
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He
said that as America was the first country to use nuclear weapons, he doubted
Washington's sincerity on nuclear non-proliferation.
Meanwhile, Larijani expressed his welcome to Obama's
decision to send his new Middle East envoy George Mitchell to the Mideast in
late February, saying it is "a positive signal."
But he blasted Washington for "double standards"
against Israel and Hamas, saying Washington "had kept silence" on Israel's
merciless bombing of civilians in Gaza.