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Big-6 close
to agreement on Iran nuke resolution
Foreign Desk Report
PARIS—The six powers seeking a U.N. resolution on Iran’s nuclear program
are nearing agreement on a text, French Foreign Minister Philippe
Douste-Blazy said Monday.
High-ranking diplomats from the U.N. Security Council’s five permanent
members plus Germany will meet Tuesday in Paris to discuss measures to
punish Iran for failing to halt the enrichment of uranium. Uranium
enrichment and plutonium reprocessing can both produce material for
atomic warheads, and Iran’s lack of complete candor about its programs
has fed suspicions in Washington and other capitals that Tehran is
trying to make nuclear weapons in violation of its treaty obligations.
Iran insists its only goal is to use enrichment to produce fuel for
nuclear reactors that generate electricity and plutonium reprocessing to
make nuclear isotopes for medical treatments. “We want to reach as broad
an agreement as possible in the U.N. Security Council,” Douste-Blazy
said in Brussels, according to the French Foreign Ministry. “Therefore
we are gathering tomorrow in Paris, to discuss the text.”
Douste-Blazy said he discussed the Iranian situation with Russian
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov. “We are in agreement with Russia to
adopt sanctions against Iran’s proliferation program,” Douste-Blazy
said. On Friday, Lavrov reaffirmed Russia’s readiness to back a U.N. ban
on exports of nuclear materials and sensitive technologies to Iran, but
said U.S.-proposed sanctions were “too tough.”
A European draft U.N. resolution in October would order all countries to
ban the supply of materials and technology that could contribute to
Iran’s nuclear and missile programs. It would also impose a travel ban
and asset freeze on companies, individuals and organizations involved in
those programs. The draft would exempt a nuclear power plant being built
by the Russians at Bushehr, Iran, but not the nuclear fuel needed for
the reactor. Russia proposed major changes that would limit sanctions
solely to measures that would keep Iran from developing nuclear weapons
and ballistic missiles. Russia would eliminate any travel ban, asset
freeze, or mention of Bushehr.
“We have taken the Russian amendments into consideration,” Douste-Blazy
said. “We want to reaffirm the unity of the international community,”
Douste-Blazy said. |