Iran
offers to restart nuclear talks but US still warns of sanctions
AFP/File/Behrouz
Mehri

Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, seen here on 28 May 2006. Iran offered
to restart nuclear talks with the European Union but the EU and Washington
were still pressing for sanctions if Tehran refuses to halt atomic work
that could be weapons-related.
By
Michael Adler
AFP
VIENNA
Petroleumworld.com
05 31 06
Iran offered Tuesday to restart nuclear talks with the European Union
but the EU and Washington were still pressing for sanctions if Tehran
refuses to halt atomic work that could be weapons-related.
Six world powers were to meet in Vienna Thursday to bridge differences
over offering Iran trade and other benefits in return for guarantees
it will not make nuclear weapons, while still preparing for sanctions
if Tehran does not comply, spokesmen in capitals confirmed.
The United States said it was optimistic a plan would be endorsed to
end the crisis over an Iranian nuclear program which Washington fears
hides the secret development of atomic weapons.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is to leave Washington Wednesday
for the Vienna talks.
"I think the assessment right now is that we feel as though we're
in pretty good shape going into Vienna," State Department spokesman
Sean McCormack told reporters in Washington.
He declined to give details "until we really have the whole thing
put together, ministers and capitals having blessed it, and ready to
talk about it in public."
A Western diplomat told AFP that disagreements among the six nations
centered around the timing of a UN Security Council resolution, if one
was needed to require Iran to comply, and which would open the door
to sanctions.
Russia and China want to delay any sanctions but the United States,
France, Germany and Britain want them imposed quickly following any
Iranian non-compliance, the diplomat said.
At stake is whether Iran will stop making enriched uranium, which can
be used for nuclear power reactor fuel or atom bomb material, as the
six powers all demand.
Iran's Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said Tuesday in Malaysia
that Iran was "ready to respond positively in resuming negotiations
(with the EU) on Iran's nuclear enrichment program without any preconditions."
The United States greeted the news by saying: "We are glad they
are going back to the EU-3 (Britain, Germany and France) talks and we
hope that they produce productive results," White House spokesman
Tony Snow told reporters.
But it was not clear if Iran was ready to meet EU-3 demands that Tehran
stop all uranium enrichment work if the talks were to resume.
The talks broke off last August when Iran resumed uranium conversion
that is the first step in enriching uranium.
Then in April Iran finally enriched a small amount of uranium, but only
to levels adequate for reactor fuel and not to the more refined weapons-grade.
A senior European diplomat in Vienna described the new Iranian offer
as "meaningless."
"We know there cannot be negotiations just like that," the
diplomat said, referring to Iran's refusal to suspend its uranium enrichment
work.
Officials in Tehran indicated that Iran may be willing to hold off on
industrial-level enrichment using huge numbers of centrifuges and limit
itself to research-scale work.
But the US position is that not one centrifuge should be spinning, in
order to keep Iran from obtaining knowledge that would represent a "break-out"
capability for making nuclear weapons.
Iran signalled Tuesday that it would study an EU-3 draft proposal of
possible benefits and sanctions that is to be finalized in Vienna Thursday,
but stuck by its refusal to halt sensitive uranium enrichment work.
EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana said Tuesday that Iran's reaction
to the EU-3-drafted offer would be crucial.
"If they reject (it), it will be once again a clear sign (that)
what they are looking (for) is not only the production of energy, but
they are looking for a level (of) enrichment going way beyond,"
Solana said in Brussels.
According to a draft text seen by AFP, but which was being revised,
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.
On the benefits side, the EU-3 proposal says world powers should help
Iran build light water reactors to help its civilian nuclear energy
program.
AFP 30 1902 GMT 05 06
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