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Discord in six-way talks over Iran nuke package
Foreign Desk Report
SHANGHAI—Six-nation talks looking to revive nuclear negotiations with
Iran fell short on Wednesday of agreeing on a new package to present
Tehran, while Iran’s president said he was open to talks within limits.
The meeting in Shanghai of the five permanent members of the U.N.
Security Council — the United States, Russia, China, Britain and France
— plus Germany and an EU representative, was a first such meeting for
China, which has kept away from the spotlight in the dispute.
But China’s Assistant Foreign Minister He Yafei emerged from several
hours of bargaining to say the diplomats failed to fully agree on a
fresh plan to offer Iran, which rejected an earlier offer of negotiating
incentives put to it in 2006. “We can say we agreed on the main content
of a plan to restart negotiations, but not all the problems have been
resolved,” He told reporters. The political director-level diplomats
would report back to their ministers in a bid to reach agreement, He
said. “When the plan to restart negotiations is referred to Iran, we
will urge Iran to respond positively,” he added.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad earlier on Wednesday told a rally
that Iran was ready for negotiations on nuclear and other issues
provided talks do not violate his country’s rights.
“The Iranian nation is after talks and negotiations but negotiations in
a logical and just framework and in line with the fundamental rights of
nations,” Ahmadinejad said in his speech broadcast on state television,
adding that Iran would not retreat from its rights “one iota.”
Tehran insists it has the right to enrich uranium, which it says is for
peaceful power. But the United States, Western European powers and their
supporters fear Iran’s enrichment could give it the means to make
nuclear weapons.
The Security Council has passed three resolutions with sanctions
pressing Iran to give international inspectors more information about
nuclear work and stop the enrichment. Iran has ruled out halting or
limiting its nuclear work in exchange for the incentives offered in
2006, and says it will only negotiate with the U.N. watchdog, the
International Atomic Energy Agency.
China has won widespread praise for hosting six-nation talks on North
Korea’s nuclear program and helping to broker agreement between
Pyongyang and Washington on initial nuclear disarmament steps in return
for economic and diplomatic rewards.
But bringing Iran in accord with wary Western powers remains beyond
China’s still limited influence. And Beijing must also tend to its own
major energy and economic stakes in Iran, said Chinese analysts. “China
wanted to show that it’s a mainstream member of the five plus one
process,” said Guo Xian’gang, a former Chinese diplomat to Iran,
referring to the six-nation talks. “But especially now with the energy
markets so high and protecting Iran, and with the U.S. focused on its
presidential election, I can’t see any new negotiating plan creating a
breakthrough in the short term.”
China’s He declined to discuss specifics of the discussions, in
particular what would be in any new package of incentives to coax Iran
back into nuclear negotiations. Iran was being offered help in civilian
nuclear power and economic development, as well as political confidence
building measures, He said. He said. “When the plan to restart
negotiations is referred to Iran, we will urge Iran to respond
positively,” he added. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad earlier on
Wednesday told a rally that Iran was ready for negotiations on nuclear
and other issues provided talks do not violate his country’s rights.
China and Russia have been colder to the idea of deeper sanctions on
Iran than the United States and other Western powers. Iran is China’s
third biggest supplier of crude oil imports, behind Angola and Saudi
Arabia.
That energy need and a general aversion to international sanctions mean
China will want any new package offered to Iran to stress rewards, not
threats, said Shen Dingli, a nuclear politics expert at Fudan University
in Shanghai. “For China, economic and energy sanctions are out of the
question,” said Shen. “Whatever role China plays, there won’t be a
breakthrough, because the other plays just aren’t ready”.
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