Iran’s supreme leader yesterday said he does not oppose nuclear talks which are resuming with world powers today despite some reservations, in his strongest sign of support for moderate President Hassan Rouhani’s push to resolve the conflict peacefully.

Iranian negotiators will hold a second round of talks with the United States and five other world powers aimed at a definitive settlement of the dispute, which led to global economic sanctions against Iran.

Today’s talks look to build on an earlier interim accord binding Iran to suspend some sensitive parts of its uranium enrichment in return for modest sanctions relief.

“What our officials started will continue. We will not renege. I have no opposition,” said Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to a crowd in the northern city of Tabriz yesterday. “But I will say again: there is no use. . . it will not lead anywhere.”

Don’t try to dress up America and erase its past record of terror, violence and ugliness

US and its Western allies suspect Iran of trying to develop atomic weapons, a charge Tehran has steadfastly denied, insisting that its nuclear programme is peaceful.

The initial deal, reached in Geneva last November, angered Islamic hardliners who accused the government of selling out to the West by making concessions on a matter of national pride.

Khamenei, whose powers transcend all others in the Islamic republic, stopped short of endorsing the hardliners’ charges but warned moderates not to get carried away with talk of better ties with traditional arch-foe, the US.

Tehran and Washington haven’t had official ties since after the 1979 Islamic revolution that toppled the US-backed Shah, and Kham­enei has vetoed any initiative for rapprochement.

“Don’t try to dress up America and erase its past record of terror, violence and ugliness,” Tasnim news agency quoted Khamenei as saying.

“The nuclear issue is just a hype. American officials are already raising other issues like human rights and missile threat.”

Iran’s deteriorating economy and President Rouhani’s landslide election in June has revived efforts to reach out to the West in hopes of easing tension and drawing badly-needed foreign investment.

Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, who leads the Iranian delegation at the negotiations, told Iran’s official news agency Irna before leaving for Vienna that “the path will continue and will bear results, even without US support. If it doesn’t succeed, everything will revert to the old ways...

“Under the present circumstances, [our] talks with America are solely on the nuclear matter, but we have no fear about addressing other issues,” he said, referring to bilateral ties with Washington.

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