LONDON - Britain examined options Sunday for new dialogue with Tehran over
the seized crew of 15 sailors and marines, as a poll suggested most Britons back
the government's goal of resolving the standoff through diplomacy.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad during a meeting in
Tehran on 6 March. The United States has said it would expedite
Ahmadinejad's request for a visa to address the UN Security Council when
it votes on a new sanctions resolution against his country next week.
[AFP]
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Government and defense
officials refused to discuss a report that claimed a Royal Navy captain or
commodore would be sent to Tehran as a special envoy to negotiate the return of
the personnel.
The official would deliver an assurance that British naval crews would never
deliberately enter Iranian waters without permission, the Sunday Telegraph
newspaper reported.
Britain's Foreign Office and Ministry of Defense said they would not comment
on negotiations, or on options being considered. "We will continue to conduct
our diplomatic discussions in private," a Foreign Office spokesman said on the
government's customary condition of anonymity.
But Transport Minister Douglas Alexander said Britain was engaged in
"exploring the potential for dialogue with the Iranians."
"The responsible way forward is to continue the often unglamorous, but
important and quiet diplomatic work to get our personnel home," Alexander told
the British Broadcasting Corp.'s Sunday AM program.
A Defense Ministry spokeswoman declined to comment on claims officials had
lost optimism of a quick end to the standoff, saying speculation about
diplomatic efforts threatened to hinder progress.
British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett appeared to soften rhetoric
against Iran Saturday ¡ª though she stopped far short of the apology sought by
many in Iran.
"I think everyone regrets that this position has arisen," Beckett said in
Bremen, Germany, before returning to England. "What we want is a way out of it."
The Foreign Office and Blair's Downing Street office said it welcomed U.S.
President Bush's intervention ¡ª calling Saturday for the release of the sailors
and marines and labeling their capture by Tehran "inexcusable behavior."
"Iran must give back the hostages," Bush said. "They're innocent, they did
nothing wrong, and they were summarily plucked out of waters."
Eight British sailors and seven marines were detained by Iranian naval units
March 23 while patrolling for smugglers near the mouth of the Shatt al-Arab, a
waterway that has long been a disputed dividing line between Iraq and Iran.
Tehran says the crew was in Iranian waters, but Britain insists its troops
were on the Iraqi side of the maritime border.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad called world powers "arrogant" for
failing to apologize.
"Instead of apologizing over trespassing by British forces, the world
arrogant powers issue statements and deliver speeches," Iran's official IRNA
news agency quoted Ahmadinejad as saying during a speech in the southeastern
city of Andinmeshk.
A poll published in the Sunday Telegraph newspaper found that 66 percent of
respondents trusted Blair and Beckett to resolve the crisis, while 28 percent
did not. Only 7 percent thought the government should be preparing to use
military force.
Pollster ICM interviewed 762 adults by telephone March 30 and 31. The margin
of error is plus or minus four percentage points.