Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif will hold nuclear talks with counterparts from the six major powers at the United Nations this week, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said today.
Zarif will join a meeting of the foreign ministers from Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States at a meeting on Iran's contested nuclear program, Asthon told reporters.
The meeting, which is expected to be held Thursday, was scheduled to involve US Secretary of State John Kerry. The United States and Iran have no diplomatic relations.
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"Foreign Minister Zarif will join the E3-plus-three later this week, which I will be chairing, in order to have a short discussion," Ashton told reporters.
"We have agreed that he and I will meet with our teams in Geneva in October," she said.
Ashton played down expectations of a breakthrough, but voiced hope.
"I was struck by the energy and determination on the part of the minister," Ashton said.
But she said, "As you would appreciate, there is a huge amount of work to do."
US President Barack Obama has pledged to test whether Rowhani, who is considered moderate within the clerical regime, is serious about resolving Western and Israeli concerns about Iran's nuclear program.
But the White House has played down the chance of a meeting between Obama and Rowhani at the UN General Assembly, which both are scheduled to address on Tuesday.
Iran says its sensitive nuclear work is meant for peaceful purposes, but Western nations and Israel have voiced fear that the regime will seek a nuclear bomb.