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Iran rules out full nuke halt
Foreign Desk Report
TEHRAN—Iran said it would not return to a full freeze of its disputed
nuclear activities, but nevertheless voiced confidence it would not face
referral to the UN Security Council. The International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) has called on Iran to halt uranium conversion work at its
Isfahan facility, and the European Union has set this as a condition for
a resuming negotiations.
But when asked if Iran would again halt uranium conversion work, foreign
ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi simply replied: “No”. “The
suspension was voluntary and we are not ready to go back on our
decision,” he told reporters, sticking by Iran’s position that it only
wants to make reactor fuel and that it has a right to do so as a
signatory of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
The refusal to suspend work at Isfahan means Iran is unlikely to resume
negotiations with Britain, France and Germany ahead of the next meeting
of the IAEA’s 35-nation board in November. The so-called EU-3, backed by
the United States, would therefore be expected to push for the case to
be referred to the Security Council.
Talks between Iran and the EU-3 broke down in August, when Iran rejected
a deal that offered trade and other incentives for a full cessation of
fuel cycle work, the focus of fears that Iran could acquire nuclear
weapons. Iran also ended a freeze on fuel cycle work by resuming uranium
conversion — a precursor to potentially dual-use civilian and military
enrichment work — in defiance of an accord struck with the EU-3 in Paris
last November.
“There is no judicial or legal reason to send the Iranian dossier to the
Security Council,” Asefi asserted.
“Many countries have this view,” he said, mentioning China and Russia as
examples and then drifting into Greek mythology: “You cannot use the
threat of the Security Council like the sword of Damocles over the head
of Iran”.
Last month Beijing abstained from voting on an IAEA resolution that
found Iran to be in non-compliance with the NPT, and is eager not to see
the tensions with Iran escalate.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov also said Saturday that Moscow
saw no reason to put the Iranian nuclear issue to the UN Security
Council as sought by Washington.
“We are concentrating on negotiations and dialogue,” Asefi said, but
acknowledged that full-scale talks with the Europeans remained frozen.
“Our ambassadors are in contact in European capital and elsewhere. But
these contacts are not like before”.
Former president and top regime official Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani also
asserted that “Iran is ready to negotiate but not when preconditions are
attached”.
The United States maintains that Iran simply cannot be trusted with the
fuel cycle.
“They need to come to a conclusion that will allow them, if they wish,
civil nuclear energy, (and) to do that without raising concerns in the
international community,” US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told
newsmen.
“The Security Council option is there, at a time of our choosing,” she
said ahead of talks in London with British Prime Minister Tony Blair. |