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Iran urges West to resume unconditional nuclear talks
Foreign Desk Report
TEHRAN (Iran)—An Iranian official said Saturday it would be in the
interests of both Iran and the West to hold unconditional talks on
resolving suspicions about Tehran’s nuclear program. Mohammad Saeedi,
deputy head of the Atomic Energy Organization, reiterated that Iran
would not accept any conditions for resuming talks with the European
Union that broke off in August, an allusion to demands that Iran again
halt its uranium conversion operations.
“If the case could be settled through practical, logical, legal and
technical solutions then the positive result of the negotiations will be
in favor of Iran as well as Europe and the United States,” Saeedi was
quoted as saying by the official Islamic Republic News Agency.
He added that talks were preferable to threats, an apparent reference to
a recent resolution passed by the U.N. nuclear agency warning Iran it
will be referred to the U.N. Security Council for possible sanctions
unless it allays fears about its nuclear program.
Washington accuses Iran of trying to build atomic bombs — a charge Iran
denies, saying its program is aimed only at producing electricity. Urged
on by the EU, the International Atomic Energy Agency has called on Iran
to halt uranium enrichment activities until it disproves the accusation.
“If Europe chooses a radical stance to confront Iran and refers the
country to the Security Council, we will use our options,” Saeedi said.
Iran has threatened to block U.N. inspections of its nuclear facilities
unless the IAEA steps back. It also warns it could go beyond its resumed
conversion of uranium into gas and start the next step in uranium
enrichment, which produces material suitable for both nuclear reactor
fuel in electricity generation and for atomic weapons.
Saeedi said Iran hopes to resolve its case at the November meeting of
the IAEA. The U.S. and EU want Iran to permanently stop enrichment as a
confidence-building measure, something Tehran says it is not prepared to
do. It rejected an EU offer of economic aid and a guaranteed supply of
reactor fuel in return for scrapping its enrichment facilities.
Talks with Britain, Germany and France, which negotiated on behalf of
the 25-nation EU, broke off in early August after Iran resumed uranium
conversion. Tehran had suspended such work under a November 2004 deal
for holding talks with the European nations. |