US embassy says not expecting new Iran talks Monday
TEHRAN, July 22 (Reuters) A US official said a second round of rare talks between Iran and the United States was not expected in Baghdad tomorrow after an Iranian newspaper reported the dialogue on Iraqi security was about to resume.
Tehran and Washington held a first round of direct talks on Iraq's stability in Baghdad on May 28. Iranian and Iraqi officials had said that a second round of talks between the two would take place soon, without specifying a date.
''After a series of ups and downs, Iran and America's ambassadors will hold talks about Iraq today in Baghdad,'' Iran's Hamshahri newspaper said today, quoting an unidentified official.
However, a US embassy spokesman in Baghdad said the embassy was not expecting a second round tomorrow, adding that any further information would come from Washington.
Officials in the Iraqi capital believe the talks could be held later this week.
The May talks were the most high-profile meeting of the two in almost three decades. Iran and the United States cut diplomatic ties shortly after Iran's 1979 Islamic revolution.
Asked about the newspaper report, Iran's government spokesman Gholamhossein Elham said ''I cannot point out a date ... Everyone will be informed when the talks start.'' Iran's Foreign Ministry also said the date of a second round of talks ''was not clear yet''.
''Iran has accepted this request (of the Iraqi government) to resolve the Iraqi nation's problems,'' spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini told a weekly news conference.
The May discussions covered security in Iraq and both US and Iranian officials say Iraqi issues, not other disputes, would be the focus of any further talks.
The newspaper said Iran's top envoy to Iraq Hassan Kazemi-Qomi will lead the Iranian delegation for the fresh round of talks with his US counterpart, Ambassador Ryan Crocker.
''But there may be some changes in the Iranian negotiating team,'' it said, without elaborating.
Washington accuses Iran of fomenting violence in Iraq, while Tehran blames the US-led invasion in 2003 for sparking bloodshed that threatens to tear the country apart.
REUTERS SM BD1743


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