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Russia, China scuttle UN resolution on Iran
Foreign Desk Report
VIENNA (Austria)—Russia and China on Tuesday scuttled a Western attempt
to introduce a resolution on Iran’s nuclear defiance at a meeting of the
International Atomic Energy Agency, diplomats said. The decision
appeared to be the result of lingering unhappiness by the two world
powers about not being informed earlier of plans for such a resolution.
It came a day after the U.N. Security Council imposed another round of
sanctions on Iran for refusing to suspend uranium enrichment. Iran
defiantly vowed to continue its nuclear program, which it insists is
aimed only at generating power. Moscow on Monday had threatened not to
back the new U.N. sanctions against Iran unless the West gave up its
IAEA resolution plans.
Then on Tuesday it signaled that it was ready to back such a document if
it was given substantial input in drafting it before deciding later in
the day that it was against it after all, said the diplomats, who spoke
on condition of anonymity because the information was confidential.
Asked why Russia and China were opposed, one of diplomats said Moscow
decided to withdraw its support “on principle” and Beijing, which often
takes a cue from Russia on the Iran nuclear dispute, followed suit.
A senior Western diplomat said the decision to scrap plans for a
resolution was jointly taken by the six powers taking the lead on
engaging Iran on its nuclear program — the United States, Russia, China,
Britain, France and Germany. He said the six felt that new U.N. Security
Council sanctions passed Monday to punish Iran had sent enough of a
message.
Gregory L. Schulte, Washington’s chief IAEA delegate, said the new
sanctions resolution underscores “that Iran’s file remains open” and
backs the IAEA’s right to continue its probe of Tehran’s past nuclear
program, particularly attempts to make weapons.
But two of the other diplomats, speaking separately, insisted the
resolution was scrapped because of Russian and Chinese opposition and
said any suggestions of unity on the issue were an attempt to cover up
an East-West split among the world powers.
A draft of the resolution, marked “restricted” and made available to The
Associated Press, reflected Western attempts to ramp up pressure on Iran
using the IAEA as a venue. It said the board “firmly supports” attempts
by IAEA Director General Mohamed ElBaradei to shed light on past
experiments “that could have a military dimension” — shorthand for
alleged attempts by Iran to develop nuclear arms.
It cites ElBaradei in calling such alleged programs “a matter of serious
concern.” And it “deeply regrets” Tehran’s refusal to suspend uranium
enrichment — a possible pathway to nuclear arms — despite four Security
Council resolutions demanding it do so.
Iran on Tuesday dismissed the latest UN Security Council sanctions over
its nuclear programme as “worthless”, vowing to press on with the
contested drive which the West fears could be used to make weapons.
The Security Council on Monday imposed its third set of sanctions
against Iran in the space of 15 months to punish Tehran’s repeated
refusal to suspend the process of uranium enrichment.
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