Hollande meets Rouhani, demands 'concrete' nuclear steps

French president, Iranian counterpart discuss Tehran's nuclear program, Syria crisis, Lebanon in meeting at UN.

Francois Hollande addressing UN 370 (photo credit: REUTERS/Andrew Burton/Pool)
Francois Hollande addressing UN 370
(photo credit: REUTERS/Andrew Burton/Pool)
                 
UNITED NATIONS - French President Francois Hollande became the first Western leader to meet new Iranian President Hassan Rouhani on Tuesday after warning that Paris expects "concrete gestures" by Iran to show it will give up a military nuclear program.
France has been a strong advocate of sanctions to pressure Iran over its nuclear program but has been cautious in its statements since Rouhani, a relative moderate, was elected.
Hollande, who exchanged handshakes with Rouhani at the United Nations - the first between leaders of the two countries since 2005 - told the UN General Assembly that while he was encouraged by the words of the new Iranian government, he now wanted acts to follow.
"France expects of Iran concrete gestures which will show that this country renounces its military nuclear program even if it clearly has the right to pursue its civilian program," Hollande said in an address before meeting with Rouhani.
"This is why I have made the choice to engage in direct and open dialogue with President Rouhani," Hollande said. "But I will also say ... I am in favor of dialogue, but just as strongly I am firm on the issue of nuclear proliferation."
A French presidential source said the 40-minute meeting had been polite and courteous and centered on Iran's nuclear program, the crisis in Syria and neighboring Lebanon, where Tehran has considerable influence over the Hezbollah militia.
"Compared to the previous administration there are signs, but the reality is that there are still hurdles to jump and progress to be made," the source said.
Since Rouhani was elected president, the centrist cleric has called for "constructive interaction" with the world, a dramatic shift in tone from the strident anti-Western and anti-Israeli rhetoric of his predecessor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
The United States and its allies suspect Iran is seeking nuclear bomb-making capability despite Tehran's insistence that its atomic program has only peaceful aims. Rouhani has vowed that his government would never develop nuclear weapons.
Tough sanctions imposed by Washington and the United Nations over the issue have taken a severe toll on Iran's economy.
The presidential source said that the talks did not go into details on the nuclear program, but that Rouhani had raised concerns about the economic sanctions on his country, suggesting Paris could immediately end sanctions on the automobile sector.
"They would like just through their words and with no real gestures for sanctions to be loosened. It's probably what they hoped for by meeting us. That was the main message. We told them that if there is progress on the nuclear dossier then the sanctions will fall by themselves," the source said.
Hollande is the first Western leader of the P5+1 nations - United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany - to meet Rouhani, and the first French leader to meet an Iranian president since Jacques Chirac met Mohammad Khatami in 2005.
Coercive measures on Syria
Hollande also discussed the crisis in Syria with Rouhani, hoping to persuade Tehran to loosen its support for President Bashar Assad and accept the terms of the proposed "Geneva 2" peace conference that calls for a transitional authority in the civil war-torn country, something Iran has so far not backed.
The French source said that Rouhani had not tried to mix the Syria crisis with the nuclear dossier and told Hollande he wanted the war to end and was open to the idea of Geneva 2.
"On Syria it's not just resolving the chemical issue, but to go get to a political solution and we know that solution also goes through Tehran," the source said.
Hollande earlier told the UN that too much time had been wasted trying to end the two-and-a-half-year civil war in Syria, which the United Nations says has killed more than 100,000 people.
"We must ensure that this war ends. It is the deadliest war since the beginning of this century. The solution is a political one and too much time has been lost," he said.
Hollande also repeated that he wanted a UN Security Council resolution that would keep close to the terms of a US-Russia deal to eradicate Syria's chemical weapons.
Russia and China have blocked three UN resolutions meant to pressure Assad during Syria's civil war.
In a clear sign of frustration with Moscow's continued stance, Hollande also called on the five permanent members of the Security Council to collectively drop their right to veto resolutions in cases that included crimes against humanity.