
UN Security Council Said to Meet Next Week on Iran
March 08, 2006
Reuters
Mark Heinrich and Parisa Hafezi
VIENNA
-- The U.N. Security Council is expected to meet on Iran next week, a senior EU
diplomat said on Wednesday as nuclear watchdog governors met to debate a report
on the Iranian nuclear drive that Tehran called "politicized".
Council intervention over suspicions Iran secretly seeks atomic bombs appeared
inevitable after Tehran brushed aside a reported Russian offer to allow limited
nuclear research if it swore off industrial fuel production for 7-9 years.
The International Atomic Energy Agency's 35-nation board of governors reported
Iran to the council a month ago and called on it to shelve uranium-enrichment
work and stop stonewalling IAEA investigations into the nature of its nuclear
program.
But the report by IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei given to this week's board
session said Tehran had generally flouted the February 4 appeal by expanding a
pilot enrichment drive, inviting Council intervention that could lead to
consideration of sanctions.
The senior diplomat from the EU trio of powers Britain, France and German said
the impasse in their and Russian efforts to resolve the crisis by diplomacy with
Iran meant the council was expected to begin deliberations next week.
Asking not to be further identified due to the subject's sensitivity, he said
the council would work quickly to issue a "presidential statement" calling on
Iran to suspend all atomic fuel enrichment activity and fully cooperate with
U.N. investigations into the nature of its atomic ambitions.
If Iran defies the call, the council could repeat its message with a possible
threat of action if it were unheeded.
But the council's sanctions option looks further off since veto-wielding Russia
and China, while sharing Western resolve to deny Iran nuclear technology of
potential use for warheads, now oppose isolating Iran where both have major
trade stakes.
The diplomat added that at this point, the active involvement of the Security
Council was necessary and inevitable since "there is no sign that the Iranians
want to compromise".
The United States and "EU3" also rebuffed the Russian proposal floated
informally in private consultations because they said it would not have
prevented Iran perfecting bomb technology via enrichment research.
RUSSIA CLOSES RANKS WITH WASHINGTON
Stung by the rejection of its trial balloon after private discussions with
Western leaders about the matter were leaked to news media, Moscow then publicly
closed ranks with Washington and the EU3 by declaring it had not drafted any new
plan.
Iran says its nuclear program aims solely at generating electricity for a
growing economy. However, it concealed atomic research from the IAEA for 18
years and its calls for Israel's destruction have rung alarm bells in the West.
But Iran insists on a right to a peaceful atomic industry as a party to the
nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. It has charged that the IAEA's resort to the
Security Council was driven by a U.S.-led agenda to isolate and topple its
Islamist government.
"The purely technical nuclear issue of the Islamic Republic of Iran is
politicized," the Iranian government said in a statement on ElBaradei's report
released just before Wednesday's debate started.
"Bias, exaggerated and unjustified information has misled the international
community," the statement said.
It added that Iran had bent over backwards to cooperate with IAEA inquiries over
the past three years, providing "voluminous information", granting access to
military sites and arranging interviews even though such steps were not required
by the NPT.
ElBaradei said Iran's compliance with probes remained selective. He gave
examples where it withheld documents, denied access to people the IAEA wanted to
query and failed to clarify allegations of military links to nuclear research.
An EU statement to be delivered to Wednesday's IAEA board session repeated that
Iran must halt all nuclear research shortly or face Council pressure to do so.
Iran's decision to curb IAEA inspections after the board notified the council
last month heightened suspicions about Iranian goals, said the statement from
Austria, current head of the rotating EU presidency.
The EU statement ruled out even low-scale research with centrifuges, machines
which convert uranium UF6 gas into fuel suitable for nuclear power reactors or,
if enriched to high levels, the fissile core of nuclear warheads.
"Key questions remain unanswered ... (and) could have a military dimension, such
as a document related to the fabrication of nuclear weapons components," it
said. Iran showed inspectors the document, saying nuclear black marketeers
provided it unsolicited, but refused to let the IAEA copy it.
Ahmadinejad: World Has to Give in to Iran Enrichment
March 08, 2006
Zee News
Bureau Report
Tehran
-- President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad warned today that the world must give in to
what he said was Iran's right to enrich uranium. The Iranian leader was
apparently responding to the US rejection of a Russian proposal to allow Iran to
carry out research-scale uranium enrichment in return for suspension of
large-scale enrichment. "Our nation has made its decision to fully use nuclear
energy for peaceful purposes and all have to give in to this decision made by
the Iranian nation," said Ahmadinejad.
"If anybody seeks to violate our rights, the Iranian nation will place the sign
of disgrace on their forehead," he told thousands of people gathered in
Khorramabad, Capital of Lorestan province in Western Iran.
"All countries can contribute (in Iran's nuclear program). But if they want to
ignore the rights of our nation, we have made our choice."
Washington warned yesterday of "meaningful consequences" if Iran does not back
away from an international confrontation over its nuclear programme. It also
rejected any potential last-minute compromise to allow Iran to develop nuclear
fuel that could be used for weapons.
Iran's top nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani, said Sunday Iran won't stop
research-scale uranium enrichment it resumed last month but is ready to
temporarily suspend large-scale enrichment.
Iran: US May Feel "Pain" if Security Council Acts
March 08, 2006
Reuters
today.reuters.com
VIENNA
-- Iran said on Wednesday the United States could feel "harm and pain" if the
U.N. Security Council took up the issue of Tehran's nuclear research and Tehran
vowed to pursue the program come what may. "The United States may have the power
to cause harm and pain but it is also susceptible to harm and pain. So if the
United States wishes to choose that path, let the ball roll," it said in a
statement obtained by Reuters on the sidelines of a U.N. nuclear watchdog board
meeting in Vienna.
Iran has accused Washington of helping to engineer an International Atomic
Energy Agency board vote a month ago to report Tehran's atomic project to the
Security Council.
Iran denies Western suspicions it is secretly trying to build atomic bombs,
saying it seeks only nuclear-generated electricity.
"In any case, we will continue to exercise our research and development
activities based on our right," the statement said.
"There are two options before us. Either to compromise and cooperate or go for
confrontation. We hope and spare no effort that the first option will be
realized," it added, alluding to now stalled diplomacy to resolve the crisis.
An Iranian collision course with the council looked more likely after Tehran
brushed aside what EU diplomats said was a Russian offer to let it do some
atomic research if it refrained from enriching uranium on an industrial scale
for 7-9 years.
The United States and its key European Union allies Britain, France and Germany
also rebuffed the idea because they said it would not have prevented Iran
perfecting bomb technology via enrichment research.
Iran to review oil exports if pushed by UN
Wed Mar 8, 2006 1:59 PM GMT
VIENNA (Reuters) - Iran, faced with likely Security Council debate next week over its nuclear programme, said on Wednesday it would have to review its oil export policy if world pressure mounted over its disputed atomic work.
Asked whether Iran would use an "oil weapon" as the world's fourth largest crude oil exporter, Javad Vaeedi, deputy secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council, told Reuters: "We will not (do so now), but if the situation changes, we will have to review our oil policies."
Vaeedi was speaking in Vienna as the International Atomic Energy Agency's 35-nation board of governors held a debate on Iran as a prelude to Security Council involvement, which it called for in a resolution passed a month ago.
Iran's chief nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani, had said on Sunday that Tehran was not keen to use oil as a weapon in its escalating row with the West "but if conditions change it could affect our decision".
He did not specify what he meant by a change in conditions.
The IAEA reported Iran to the Security Council, which is empowered to impose sanctions, after failing to convince many countries that it is developing nuclear energy for power stations and not for warheads.
Iran is the fourth biggest oil exporter in the world and the second largest in the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). There is broad international concern that isolating Iran could drive up already high oil prices.
Iran Boosts Persian Gulf Presence With Locally Made Submarine
March 08, 2006
Agence France-Presse
Defence Talk
Tehran
-- Iran's armed forces have deployed a new locally-built submarine in Persian
Gulf waters, state television reported Tuesday. The vessel is named the Nahang,
meaning whale, and was "built by specialists in the Iranian defence ministry and
has the capability to carry multipurpose weapons for different missions", Rear
Admiral Sajjad Kouchaki said.
"The submarine is fully adapted to the Persian Gulf," he said, adding that the
Iranian navy was pursuing a policy of deterrence in the strategic waters -- home
to the world's largest oil reserves.
No further details on the submarine were given.
Last May state media announced Iran had begun producing its first locally-built
submarine. At the time it was called the Ghadir, named after a Shiite religious
holiday.
According to foreign military experts, Iran's inventory of submarines patrolling
Gulf waters includes up to six Russian-built SSK or SSI Kilo class diesel
submarines.
In recent months Israel has been dangling the threat of pre-emptive action to
stop Iran's disputed nuclear energy programme -- seen as a mask for weapons
development.
The United States has also refused to rule out military action against Iran.
Rumsfeld Says Quds Division of Iran's Revolutionary Guards Infiltrating Iraq
March 07, 2006
The Associated Press
Robert Burns
WASHINGTON
-- Raising a new complaint about Iran, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld on
Tuesday accused Tehran of dispatching elements of its Revolutionary Guard to
stir trouble inside Iraq.
At the same time, he rejected the idea that Iraq has slipped into civil war,
asserting that media reports have overstated recent violence there.
Rumsfeld offered few details concerning his allegation of interference by Iran,
which fought a nearly decade-long war with Saddam Hussein's Iraq in the 1980s
and shares a largely unguarded border.
"They are currently putting people into Iraq to do things that are harmful to
the future of Iraq," he told a Pentagon news conference. "And it is something
that they, I think, will look back on as having been an error in judgment."
He did not elaborate except to say the infiltrators were members of the Al Quds
Division of Iran's Revolutionary Guards, the network of soldiers and vigilantes
whose mandate is to defeat threats to the 1979 Islamic revolution. The Al Quds
Division is responsible for operations outside Iranian territory.
Rumsfeld and other U.S. officials have previously complained of Iranian
complicity in the movement of explosives and bomb-making material across the
border into Iraq, but Rumsfeld had not mentioned Iranian forces before.
He initially said the infiltrators were doing "things that are harmful to the
future of Iraq," but later when asked specifically whether they were gathering
intelligence or fomenting violence, Rumsfeld said he did not know what their
mission was.
Appearing with Rumsfeld, Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
said that although there have been indications of Iranian-manufactured weapons
coming into Iraq, "the most recent reports have to do with individuals crossing
the border." He said he had an estimate of the number but declined to reveal it.
Pace said he did not know whether the Iranians were sent by their government.
Asked the same question, Rumsfeld replied, "Of course. Quds force, the
Revolutionary Guard, doesn't go milling around willy-nilly, one would think."
In the unclassified portion of its report to Congress last month on Iraq, the
Pentagon made no mention of interference from Iran. It noted, however, that
progress in building an Iraqi border police force has lagged behind expectations
and said it suffers from corruption, "ghost" employees, and absenteeism among
employees.
Rumsfeld also was asked about violence in Iraq since an attack last month on a
revered Shiite mosque touched off a wave of reprisals between religious sects.
"I do not believe they are in a civil war today," Rumsfeld said. However, he
added, "There has always been a potential for civil war."
The secretary spoke nearly two weeks after the Feb. 22 bombing of a sacred
Shiite shrine in Samarra, which was followed by the deaths of hundreds of
Iraqis. Hoping to keep Iraqi efforts to form a unity government moving forward,
U.S. officials have acknowledged concern about the violence but have repeatedly
denied that they fear a full-scale civil war was erupting.
Rumsfeld acknowledged that the attack on the mosque had delayed efforts to form
a government in which Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds would share power.
"Their efforts to fashion a unity government that will represent all elements of
their society is clearly being delayed by the situation in Iraq," Rumsfeld said.
But he also asserted that Iraqi leaders had thus far passed the test of holding
the country together and containing insurgents' efforts to ignite a civil war.
"They have to be fully aware that if this does not work, they and all of the
people who have supported them lose everything, if this turns into a civil war.
They can't want that," he said. "My impression is they will sort through this
and fashion a government" that rules from the center.
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Iran ‘Buying Missiles from North Korea’
http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200603/200603070022.html |
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Iran is reportedly stepping up development of long-range missiles. According to an intelligence report given to Reuters by a non-U.S. diplomat, Tehran is pursuing a program code-named Project 111, whose aim is to arm Iran's Shahab-3 missiles, which experts believe have a maximum range of 2,000 kilometers, with nuclear warheads. The Shahab is based on North Korea's Rodong missile technology. The report could not be independently confirmed, and an Iranian official who asked not to be named denied the charge. Reuters also said a German diplomat, citing his country's intelligence data, confirmed that Iran had purchased from North Korea 18 disassembled BM-25 mobile missiles with a range of 2,500 km, which would render them capable of reaching Israel and Turkey from Iran. Quoting Alireza Jafarzadeh, an Iranian exile in Washington, Reuters said Tehran sharply increased production of the Shahab-3 missiles from less than 20 to around 90 a year. Last month, the Washington Post had reported on the existence of Project 111. Arirang News |
US, Russia reject Iran compromise
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4784262.stm
The United States and Russia have ruled out an Iranian proposal to allow Tehran to run its own small-scale uranium enrichment programme.
Iran had suggested it might be allowed to enrich small quantities of uranium for research purposes while importing most of its nuclear fuel from Russia.
However, the US opposes allowing Iran to enrich any uranium.
Speaking in Washington, Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov also rejected a deal.
Mr Lavrov said Moscow's proposal for Iran to enrich uranium on Russian territory depended on Iran's full compliance with the requirements of the UN nuclear agency.
The International Atomic Energy Agency wants Iran to suspend uranium enrichment altogether. Its board is currently meeting in Vienna to consider Iran's case.
It voted last month to report Iran to the UN Security Council for failing to disclose details of its nuclear activities.
'Proliferation risk'
Last week, Tehran suggested a compromise deal in which it would be allowed to enrich a small amount of uranium for research purposes, in return for accepting the Russian proposal.
However, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said the only deal she backed was the original Russian proposal.
"This is not an issue of Iran's right to civil nuclear power, it is that there needs to be a way to provide for civil nuclear power that does not have a proliferation risk," she said after talks with Mr Lavrov.
Mr Lavrov said there was "no compromise" to the Russian proposal.
Western powers believe Iran wants to develop nuclear arms, a claim it denies.
Tehran insists it has the right to develop its nuclear sector to produce energy for civilian purposes.
Three years of negotiations between Iran and the EU have brought no significant result, and Iran resumed enrichment in January after a two-year hiatus.
Compensation appeal
Earlier, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said the West should compensate Iran for its suspension of nuclear research, as a way of building trust.
However, he failed to mention that Iran's suspension of uranium enrichment two years ago - the basis of his call for compensation - had been voluntary, the BBC's Frances Harrison reports from Tehran.
A senior military commander warned on Monday that the Iranian military would turn the country into a killing field for any enemy aggressor.
There is now more talk from Iranian officials of preparing people psychologically for confrontation with the West, our correspondent says.
But Iranian television has accused Western media of exaggerating the dispute over Iran's nuclear ambitions, our correspondent says.
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