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Home Defence & Military News Defense Geopolitics News

Major powers to seek sanctions against Iran

by Editor
December 3, 2007
in Defense Geopolitics News
3 min read
0
14
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Agence France-Presse,

PARIS (AFP): The six powers dealing with Iran's contested nuclear programme will start work on a resolution calling for new sanctions against Iran at the UN Security Council, a French diplomatic source said Saturday.
 
“The six have agreed to examine the elements of a new resolution on sanctions” against Tehran, said the source, who asked to remain anonymous.

“A compromise text will be worked out and should circulate between the capital cities concerned next week,” the source said.

The text would be sent to the UN Security Council in New York if the countries manage to agree on the details, the source added.

Tehran is already under two sets of UN sanctions, as well as unilateral US sanctions, for refusing to suspend uranium enrichment.

Representatives of the United States, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany met in Paris on Saturday to discuss Iran's contested nuclear programme after last-ditch talks failed to produce a breakthrough.

The European Union's foreign policy chief Javier Solana said he was “disappointed” after the talks in London on Friday with Iranian nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili, hours before a deadline for him to report back to world powers on the issue.

“I have to admit that after five hours of meetings I expected more, and therefore I am disappointed,” Solana told reporters.

The talks were seen as a last chance for Tehran before a possible new round of sanctions, though hopes of a breakthrough had been slim.

Jalili said Saturday that Iran was not to blame for the disappointment expressed by Solana.

“The fact is that we defended the Iranian nation's rights and stressed fulfilling our duties and that the Iranian nation will not accept anything that goes beyond the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty,” he said.

“If some people have become disappointed because they cannot deprive Iran of its natural rights then this is another matter,” Jalili told reporters after arriving back in Tehran.

Solana's advisor was to brief representatives of the six powers at the meeting on Saturday.

Western nations suspect Iran is using its nuclear programme to covertly develop a nuclear bomb. Despite Iranian denials, the United States and its allies are pressing for stronger UN sanctions against Tehran, a move resisted by China and Russia.

The French diplomatic source said the new resolution would be a compromise between Western nations and China and Russia. A resolution could be agreed upon in the short-term, perhaps in the coming weeks, the source said.

Tehran had promised to bring “new ideas” to the table for the London talks but Solana's spokeswoman Cristina Gallach said Friday: “There was not enough new in order not to be disappointed.”

Jalili said the Iranian side had put forward three “good ideas” to the Europeans in the talks, including “joint cooperation for disarmament”, the “peaceful use of nuclear energy” and the “prevention of the expansion of nuclear defence proliferation”.

The proposals appeared to be in line with past calls by Tehran on the West to destroy their own nuclear arsenals to help forge a breakthrough in the nuclear crisis.

Solana and Jalili said they had agreed to talk by phone in December, and possibly to meet in person.

Normally optimistic, Solana has appeared increasingly frustrated in recent weeks as time has slipped away for him to make his evaluation to the UN Security Council by the November 30 deadline.

Critics say Tehran has played the five permanent Security Council members plus Germany against each other, counting on China and Russia to block further sanctions demanded by the United States.

US critics say Iran is continuing a long-standing strategy of diplomatic brinksmanship, offering last-minute compromises to delay further sanctions while pressing ahead with its nuclear plans.

The UN nuclear watchdog, in its latest report last month, said Iran was cooperating but also pressing ahead with uranium enrichment work.

International Atomic Energy Agency director general Mohamed ElBaradei has said the body is still unable to confirm that Iran's nuclear programme is peaceful.

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