<http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/04/10/BAGV9P6C0S6.DTL>
Pelosi, Lantos may be interested in diplomatic trip to Iran
Carla Marinucci, Chronicle Political Writer
Tuesday, April 10, 2007

(04-10) 18:42 PDT -- House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Rep. Tom Lantos,
D-San Mateo, just back from a trip to Syria that sparked sharp
criticism from Republicans and the Bush administration, suggested
Tuesday that they may be interested in taking another diplomatic trip
- to open a dialogue with Iran.

The Democratic speaker from San Francisco and Lantos, chairman of the
House Foreign Affairs Committee, were asked at a press conference in
San Francisco Tuesday whether on the heels of their recent trip to the
Middle East they would be interested in extending their diplomacy in
the troubled region with a visit to Iran.

"Speaking just for myself, I would be ready to get on a plane tomorrow
morning, because however objectionable, unfair and inaccurate many of
(Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's) statements are, it is
important that we have a dialogue with him,'' Lantos said. "Speaking
for myself, I'm ready to go -- and knowing the speaker, I think that
she might be.''

Pelosi did not dispute that statement, and noted that Lantos -- a
Hungarian-born survivor of the Holocaust -- brought "great experience,
knowledge and judgment" to the recent bipartisan congressional
delegation trip to Israel, the Palestinian territories, Lebanon and
Saudi Arabia in addition to Syria.

"I find the president of Iran's remarks to be so repulsive that they
are outside the circle of civilized human behavior,'' Pelosi said,
referring to Ahmadinejad's past comments that Israel should be wiped
off the face of the map and his questioning of the existence of the
Holocaust.

"But a person of Mr. Lantos' stature and personal experience is saying
that -- even as a Holocaust survivor and even recognizing the
outrageous statements of the president of Iran -- it's important to
have dialogue. I think that speaks volumes.''

Pelosi was criticized by President Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney
and other members of the administration for meeting with Syrian
President Bashar Assad, who the administration said has meddled in the
politics and fomented violence in Iraq and Lebanon and is a state
sponsor of terrorism. Other Republicans, however, also visited Syria
during the current congressional recess. One of those lawmakers, Rep.
Darrell Issa, R-Vista (San Diego County), visited Syria a day after
the Pelosi delegation and said the Bush administration should be
talking with Assad as a way of trying to bring peace to the region.

The president also has tried to isolate Iran, saying its government,
too, has aided attacks against Americans in Iraq and elsewhere while
ramping up its efforts to build nuclear weapons.

Lantos said that for more than a decade, he has been trying to obtain
a visa to visit Tehran with the help of former U.N. Secretary General
Kofi Annan -- and to date neither he nor any other member of Congress
has been successful.

Pelosi said that throughout the congressional delegation's recent
Middle East trip, "every place we went we had a constant message: the
safety and security of Israel, fighting terrorism.''

"There was, of course, a shadow over all of it, Iran: Iran's support
of terrorist groups is something that must be stopped,'' she said.
"Iran's quest for a nuclear weapon is something that must not happen
and we must stop them with the strongest of diplomatic measures.''

Lantos noted that "with the speaker's support,'' he has co-sponsored
legislation in the House that calls for making available to all
countries -- including Iran -- nuclear fuel for peaceful purposes
under international oversight by establishing a "nuclear fuel bank."

"So if the Iranian president says that he is developing (nuclear
material) for peaceful purposes, we are assisting him in that
process,'' said Lantos, who anticipated the legislation could pass as
early as May.

E-mail Carla Marinucci at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

--
Yoshie

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