Iran's Civil Aviation Organization said Thursday it has proposed resuming
direct flights between Iran and the United States after more than 25 years,
despite political hostilities between the two countries.
Raza Jafarzadeh, a spokesman for the aviation organization, said Iranians
living in the United States had asked for the flights when President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad visited New York to attend a U.N. meeting in September, and the
Iranian leader directed the organization to consider the request.
"On Wednesday, we sent a letter to the head of the civil aviation in the
United States declaring our readiness" to resume direct flights, Jafarzadeh
said.
There was no immediate response from the United States.
Iran and the United States severed air links when Washington broke relations
in 1979 after Iranian militants stormed the U.S. Embassy in Tehran and held the
occupants hostage.
Iran's proposal comes amid an international impasse over a U.S.-backed push
to bring the country before the U.N. Security Council over its nuclear program.
The United States suspects Iran is trying to develop atomic weapons, a claim
Tehran denies.
Jafarzadeh acknowledged the proposal stood in contrast to the prevailing
political tensions between the two countries, but said: "It was just an answer
to a demand by passengers who found their luggage was being damaged at various
connection points on the way to the United States."
About 1 million Iranians live in the United States, mostly in California.
Thousands fly to Iran every year, often changing planes in London, Amsterdam and
Frankfurt.
"Iran plans to resume flights to both New York and Los Angeles," Jafarzadeh
said. "Iranian and foreign airlines, including American ones, could fly the
routes."