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World
powers weigh nuclear 'guarantee' for Iran, Russia says

By
Christopher
Boian
AFP
MOSCOW
Petroleumworld.com
05 30 06
World powers are prepared to guarantee Iran's right to develop nuclear
energy provided Tehran eases international concerns over its nuclear
intentions and cooperates fully with the UN atomic watchdog, Russia
said Monday.
Speaking at the start of a critical week of high-stakes diplomacy, Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov said the five permanent UN Security Council members
and Germany were hammering out a plan for resumption of talks with Tehran.
"We are prepared to guarantee Iran's right to peaceful nuclear
energy on the condition it answers the questions the IAEA has raised,"
Russian news agencies quoted him as saying, referring to the Vienna-based
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
In Vienna, diplomats said foreign ministers from the UN permanent five
-- Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States -- and Germany
planned to meet there Thursday.
The meeting has not yet been confirmed, they cautioned, but one European
diplomat said that it was being arranged to "fine-tune" an
EU-drafted package of incentives to get Iran to guarantee it will not
make nuclear weapons, as well as sanctions if Tehran does not comply.
Political directors from the six foreign ministries will Tuesday discuss
the package in a telephone conference, diplomats in Vienna confirmed.
The United States suspects Iran is working secretly toward building
its own nuclear weapons under cover of a civilian drive for atomic power,
and accuses Tehran of failing to cooperate with the IAEA.
Iran denies these charges, saying its nuclear work is confined strictly
to generating energy and insisting that it has always cooperated with
the IAEA.
As Lavrov spoke, Iran stressed that it would pursue its uranium enrichment
work -- the process that makes fuel for reactors but also what can be
the raw material for atom bombs.
"Enrichment will continue on Iranian territory within the framework
of Iran's peaceful nuclear programme and the IAEA," government
spokesman Gholam Hossein Elham told reporters in Tehran.
In Malaysia, visiting Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said
any new incentive from the European Union that did not acknowledge Iran's
right to develop nuclear energy on its own would be a non-starter.
"The main incentive for Iran is to recognise the essential right
of Iran to have nuclear technology and the ways of realising this right,"
Mottaki said.
Lavrov's comments however suggested that some kind of consensus among
the world's top powers on how to deal with widespread concern over Iran's
nuclear ambitions may be taking shape.
Referring to all six major world powers involved in efforts to resolve
the standoff, Lavrov stated: "We are ready and mutually interested
in drawing Iran into full economic cooperation as well as in cooperation
in regional security."
He did not elaborate, but foreign policy experts in Russia, Europe and
the United States have said for months that the key to breaking the
deadlock lies in economic incentives and practical security assurances
from the West.
In Vienna, a Western diplomat said the EU negotiating troika of Britain,
France and Germany "are working hard now to revise their package
to respond to concerns, mostly from Russia and China."
The diplomat said disagreements centered around the timing of any Security
Council resolution to require Iran to comply and open the door to sanctions,
with Russia and China wanting to put this off but the United States
and Europe wanting sanctions to quickly follow any Iranian non-compliance.
"There are still significant areas of disagreement" such as
"the detail and commitment in the package to a specific menu of
sanctions," the diplomat said.
According to a draft text seen by AFP, the possible sanctions include
an arms embargo on Iran -- something Russia, a major arms supplier to
Iran, and China, a major consumer of Iranian oil, resist.
cb-msa/km/smc
AFP 29 1622 GMT 05 06
Copyright © 1994-2006 Agence France-Presse. All Rights Reserved.
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