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U.S. plans envoy presence in Iran after 30 years

Ewen MacAskill

As part of a remarkable turnaround in policy by Bush


Currently, U.S. interests in Iran looked after by the Swiss Embassy

State Department has been pressing the White House to re-establish diplomatic ties with Tehran


Washington: The U.S. plans to establish a diplomatic presence in Tehran for the first time in 30 years as part of a remarkable turnaround in policy by President George Bush.

The Guardian is reporting that an announcement will be made in the next month to establish a U.S. interests section — a halfway house to setting up a full embassy. The move will see U.S. diplomats stationed in the country.

The news of the shift by Mr. Bush, who has pursued a hawkish approach to Iran throughout his tenure, comes at a critical time in U.S.-Iranian relations. After weeks that have seen tensions rise with Israel conducting war games and Tehran carrying out long-range missile tests, a thaw appears to be under way.

The White House on Wednesday announced that William Burns, a senior State Department official, is to be sent to Switzerland on Saturday to hear Tehran’s response to a European offer aimed at resolving the nuclear stand-off.

A frequent complaint of the Iranians is that they want to deal directly with the Americans instead of its surrogates, Britain, France and Germany.

Mr. Bush has taken a hard line with Iran throughout the last seven years but, in the dying days of his administration, it is believed he is keen to have a positive legacy that he can point to.

The return of U.S. diplomats to Iran is dependent on agreement by Tehran. But Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad indicated earlier this week that he was not against the opening of a U.S. mission. Iran would consider favourably any request aimed at boosting relations between the two countries, he said.

Special interests section

The U.S. interests in the country at present are looked after by the Swiss Embassy. The British government restored its embassy in Tehran after the Labour Party’s 1997 general election victory as part of a policy of constructive diplomacy with countries that had previously been branded rogue states.

The creation of a U.S. interest section would see diplomats stationed in Tehran for the first time since the hostage crisis that began when hundreds of students, as part of the Iranian revolution that led to fall of the Shah, stormed the U.S. Embassy in 1979 and held the occupants until 1981.

The special interests section would be similar to the one in Havana, Cuba. The U.S. broke off relations with Cuba in 1961 after Fidel Castro’s takeover but U.S. diplomats returned in 1977.

The special interests section carries out all the functions of an embassy. It is, in terms of protocol, part of the Swiss Embassy but otherwise is staffed by Americans and independent of the Swiss.

There has been an intense debate within the Bush administration over Iran, with Vice-President Dick Cheney in favour of a military strike against Iranian nuclear plants and the State Department in favour of diplomacy.

The State Department has been pressing the White House for the last two years to re-establish diplomatic relations with Tehran by setting up an interest section.

The department is keen that the move should not be interpreted as a sign of weakness.

Sending Mr. Burns to Geneva and the establishment of an interests section undercuts one of the main planks of foreign policy advocated by the Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama, who argues for direct negotiations with Iran.

The White House has been working in tandem over the last month with Mr. Obama’s Republican rival, John McCain.

The U.S. has had to rely on British diplomats based in Tehran, as well as other diplomats, for information about the inner workings of Iranian politics. Having its own staff would give them access to students, dissidents and others. The staff would also process visa applications, at present handled by a small office in Dubai, which is difficult for Iranians to get to.

Mr. Ahmadinejad told a reporter earlier this week, to a question about a possible U.S. interests section: “We will receive favourably any action which will help to reinforce relations between the peoples.”

He added: “We have not received any official request but we think that the development of relations between the two peoples is something correct.” That sentiment was echoed last month by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who told reporters: “We want more Iranians visiting the United States ... We are determined to reach out to the Iranian people.”

Iran has an interests section in Washington, which would make it harder for Tehran to deny the Americans a similar arrangement. — © Guardian Newspapers Limited, 2008

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