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Special report: Iran Nuclear Crisis
Iranian ex-President Mohammad
Khatami |
 Former U.S. President Jimmy
Carter | WASHINGTON,
Aug 30 (Xinhua)-- Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter has agreed in principle to
meet Iranian ex-President Mohammad Khatami when the former Iranian leader visits
the United States this week, the Washington Post reported on Wednesday.
Carter's term as president was dominated by the
rupture in relations following the 1979 Iranian revolution and the takeover of
the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, where 52 Americans were held hostage for 444 days
until the day he left office.
"Carter, who has every reason to be angry about the
way in which the Iranian revolution undid his presidency over the hostage
affair, is willing to meet, with no hesitation, a person who was president of
the Islamic republic and who never disavowed Ayatollah Khomeni's actions when he
was supreme leader," William Quandt, a national security official in charge of
the Middle East during the Carter administration was quoted as saying.
The U.S. State Department said on Tuesday that it had
issued a visa to Khatami to visit Washington.
There will be no restrictions on Khatami's travel in
the United States, State Department spokesman Tom Casey said, adding, "This is
an opportunity in part for former President Khatami to hear the concerns of the
American people."
Khatami, who served as Iranian president from 1997 to
2005, was described as a reformer in Iran's political arena. He is scheduled to
speak at Washington National Cathedral on Sept 7.
Khatami's schedule may also include speeches at the
University of Virginia and to an Islamic group in Chicago. He may pay a private
visit to Thomas Jefferson's home at Monticello, according to sources familiar
with his trip. He will begin his visit in New York at a U.N. conference on the
dialogue of civilizations.
"Mr Khatami is free to meet with who he chooses and
is able to speak freely in the United States," a White House official said on
condition of anonymity.
Khatami's visit comes amid high tensions between
Washington and Tehran over Iran's suspected program to develop nuclear weapons
and its alleged support for Hezbollah guerrillas. Enditem |