Italian FM Frattini to send envoy to Teheran

After canceling his visit to Iran, Frattini says Italy considers talks on regional security "important."

Franco Frattini 224.88 ap (photo credit: AP [file])
Franco Frattini 224.88 ap
(photo credit: AP [file])
Italy's foreign minister said Saturday he is sending a representative to Teheran to sound out the possibility of a meeting with Iranian officials after he canceled a visit earlier this week. Franco Frattini said Italy considers talks on regional security issues, especially the stabilization of Afghanistan, "particularly important." "Our troops are in Herat, which shares 370 miles (600 kilometers) of border with Iran," Frattini said, speaking on the sidelines of a newspaper industry conference in La Bagnaia, Tuscany. Italy has some 2,800 soldiers in Afghanistan, mostly in Kabul and the western region of Herat. Frattini scrapped his planned Wednesday trip to Iran after Teheran tested a missile capable of reaching Israel and US Mideast bases. The ministry said the Iranians wanted Frattini to meet Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at the site of the missile launch. Frattini told reporters on Saturday it was his "duty" to cancel the visit, because "going to the base from the which the missile left would have changed the goal of my mission." He said he was still planning to invite Iran to attend a conference in Trieste on security issues in the Afghan region in late June. US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton would also be expected to attend as part of a series of Group of Eight meetings. Frattini has said in the past he wants to visit Iran and hold talks with officials on the stabilization of Afghanistan separately from the thorny issue of Teheran's nuclear program. Asked by The Associated Press about the prospect that he would be the highest-ranking official from an EU country to visit Iran in four years, Frattini replied: "We will see. I am sending someone in the coming days." EU governments have sought to avoid high-level meetings because of Iran's refusal to halt its uranium enrichment program, as called for in UN resolutions. Many Western countries fear Iran is working to produce nuclear weapons, while Teheran claims it is only seeking nuclear fuel for energy. Italy has had good relations with Iran, and is the country's leading trading partner in the European Union. Italian officials believe no long-term stability can be reached in the Middle East region without involving Iran.