|
France,
Germany keep EU sanctions pressure on Iran
Foreign Desk Report
PARIS/BERLIN—France and Germany signaled on Friday the European Union
could punish Iran for pressing ahead with its nuclear program before the
world’s top powers agree on further sanctions at the United Nations.
France urged other EU states this week to start exploring further
sanctions against Iran now, at the same time as the five permanent
members of the U.N. Security Council and Germany negotiate a third round
of U.N. measures against Tehran. Some European countries, such as Italy,
have signaled their reluctance to back EU measures outside the U.N.
framework.
Germany appeared to give cautious backing to that strategy with comments
suggested a hardening of Berlin’s position. Until now, it has insisted
the debate in the Security Council run its course before action outside
it is considered. “In the event a Security Council decision cannot be
reached and Iran is not showing a readiness to cooperate, the EU needs
to think in a timely way about how to react,” a German Foreign Ministry
spokeswoman told a news conference.
Major powers have agreed not to pass the U.N. sanctions until November,
to see whether an agreement between Iran and the U.N. nuclear watchdog
aimed at clearing up questions about Tehran’s atomic program yields
results, and to await a report by EU negotiator Javier Solana on talks
with Iran. A spokesman for French President Nicolas Sarkozy said
European countries could take their own steps to slow trade with Iran
before EU sanctions were agreed.
“Discussions (in the EU) are not that easy to try to reach a toughening
of the sanctions regime,” Sarkozy’s spokesman David Martinon told a
weekly news conference. Talks at the UN and within the EU should
continue, he said.
“At the same time that does not preclude the fact that each European
country can move forward unilaterally on a national basis by giving a
certain number of recommendations to its companies.” France has
toughened its rhetoric against Tehran since Sarkozy took office in May.
Sarkozy and Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner have warned of the
prospect of military action against Iran.
Kouchner has said Paris has asked large French companies such as oil
major Total not to bid for tenders in Iran to jack up pressure on Tehran
to comply with U.N. demands that it suspend activities linked to uranium
enrichment, a process that can make fuel for atomic power plants or
bombs.
Iran denies charges it is seeking nuclear weapons and says its atomic
technology is geared solely to producing electricity. It has refused to
suspend enrichment as the Security Council has repeatedly demanded.
Kouchner sparked controversy last month by saying the world should
prepare for the possibility of war with Iran. He has spent a lot of time
since explaining that he wants to find a diplomatic solution to avert
that prospect. “France has not hardened its position on Iran. Iran is a
great country that we respect and with which we speak constantly and
will continue to speak,” Kouchner told a joint news conference with his
Turkish counterpart Ali Babacan in Ankara.
“This great country must respect international rules ... France will do
all it can in its relations with this great country to ensure that the
crisis is resolved.” President George W. Bush told Al Arabiya TV that
the United States would work with the EU, the UN, China and Russia to
send a clear message to Tehran that they would continue to impose
sanctions and make it difficult for the Iranian government to work in
the world until it changed its thinking.
In the interview Bush said he would exhaust all diplomatic channels on
the Iranian issue.
|