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Iran
mulls attractions of West's nuclear offer
AFP
BRUSSELS
Petroleumworld.com
07 09 06
The West is offering Iran economic and other benefits in return for
curbing its nuclear plans -- and while Tehran may be playing hard to
get, it is clearly tempted by the package, officials say.
Iranian leaders have welcomed the offer, presented by European Union
foreign policy chief Javier Solana on June 6, as a "positive step"
but have rejected calls to suspend uranium enrichment on the basis of
it.
Diplomats say Tehran is plainly more impressed by this offer -- drawn
up by the five permament UN Security Council members plus Germany --
than a previous compromise proposal by the so-called EU-3 of France,
Britain and Germany.
"Iranian leaders see this offer as fundamentally different from
that of the EU-3," said an EU official, referring to the offer
presented in August 2005 but immediately rejected by Tehran.
"They see it as an opportunity," added the European source.
The first part of offer is the most sensitive: in it the EU, the United
States, Russia and China commit themselves to supporting the construction
of light water reactors in Iran and guarantee access to fuel supplies
for them.
The aim of this proposal is to persuade the Islamic republic to abandon
plans to build a heavy-water reactor in Arak, central Iran, which could
in theory produce plutonium usable in atomic warheads.
At the same time the West is offering guarantees to provide fuel for
future nuclear power plans from outside the country -- whereas Iran
wants to retain the right to enrich uranium on its own soil.
Iranian leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and hardline President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad have both said Tehran cannot trust the West on this score,
even if they admit that Iran will have to import some nuclear fuel in
the future.
On the economic front, the United States is dangling the offer of lifting
an embargo on sales to Iran of commercial aircraft and spare parts,
which would let the country renew its ageing and increasingly dangerous
airplane fleet.
A proposal to support Iran's access to international capital markets
is very important for an economy which, despite enormous oil revenues,
suffers from a lack of foreign investment, new technology and from growing
unemployment.
A promise to help Iran join the World Trade Organization is of less
immediate interest to Tehran, since the country's economy would struggle
to deal with the consquences of WTO membership.
Politically, the West's offer pledges increased efforts "to promote
dialogue and cooperation on regional security issues" -- a vow
certain to please Iran in terms of acknowledging its role as a key regional
power.
AFP 07 1639 GMT 07 06
Copyright
©2006 AFP.
All Rights Reserved.
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