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Iran nuclear
ambitions are major Gulf threat: NATO
MANAMA—NATO’s secretary-general told Gulf Arab states on Thursday that
Iran’s nuclear ambitions were a major threat to regional stability.
“Iran’s pursuit of uranium enrichment capability in violation of its
U.N. Security Council obligations is a serious concern not just for
Iran’s neighbors but for the entire international community,” Jaap de
Hoop Scheffer told a conference to promote ties between NATO and Gulf
Arab states.
Iran says its nuclear program is aimed solely at producing electricity
but the West accuses it of trying to develop nuclear weapons, a charge
Tehran denies. Gulf Arab states have also voiced concern over Iran’s
nuclear plans. “We in the Gulf think Iran has the right to nuclear
energy for peaceful purposes, but we fear Iran’s intentions. We (the
Gulf states) speak the same language on Iran,” Bahraini politician
Sheikh Khaled Khalifa al Khalifa told Reuters.
NATO, a 26-nation security and defense alliance of North American and
European countries, has sought to bolster ties with Gulf Arab states.
Bahrain, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar have agreed to
explore cooperation opportunities. At the conference, Bahrain signed an
agreement with NATO on the exchange of security information.
NATO’s dialogue with the Gulf countries is part of the Istanbul
Cooperation Initiative, launched in 2004. Saudi Arabia and Oman have yet
to join the Istanbul initiative. An Omani conference delegate declined
to comment on whether the country would eventually join while Saudi
Arabia’s representative said the kingdom had not yet decided.
NATO’s involvement in Afghanistan, where violence has risen since the
Taliban relaunched their insurgency to overthrow the pro-Western Afghan
government and eject foreign troops, has disappointed many Arabs.
The role of key NATO members the United States and Britain in the Iraq
war has also fostered skepticism, diplomats said. “The general feeling
toward NATO, after what happened in Iraq and Afghanistan, is not good,”
conference delegate Azmy Khalifa, Egypt’s ambassador to Bahrain, said.
De Hoop Scheffer said many people thought of NATO as a “Cold War
institution,” a label he said was an outdated stereotype. “It’s a
question to some degree in terms of the role and the mission of NATO and
I think that that lack of clarity is prevalent even within NATO
circles,” said Abdullah Al Mouallimi, Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to
Brussels and the European Union.
Other issues of mutual concern to NATO and the Gulf include border
security, safeguarding energy supply lines, disaster control and public
diplomacy, officials said.
North Korea Thursday reported progress in talks with a visiting US team
aimed at restarting a stalled nuclear disarmament deal, as US
intelligence officials in Washington accused Pyongyang of sharing atomic
technology with Syria. The team led by US State Department official Sung
Kim spent two days in Pyongyang from Tuesday discussing the North’s
promised nuclear declaration, an issue which has blocked progress on the
six-nation pact for months.
“The negotiations proceeded in a sincere and constructive manner and
progress was made there,” a North Korean foreign ministry spokesman was
quoted as saying by the communist state’s Korean Central News Agency.
Kim told reporters in Seoul: “I will just tell you that we had a good
visit. We had a very substantive discussion.” Apparent US concessions
over the contents of the declaration, which is supposed to disclose all
the North’s nuclear activities, have come under fire from conservatives
in Washington.—Agencies
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