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West
dismissive of call for 'timeout' in Iran nuclear crisis
By
Michael Adler
AFP
VIENNA
Petroleumworld.com 01 29 06
Western states said Monday they did not expect a quick response to the
UN nuclear chief's call for a "timeout" in the Iranian nuclear
crisis, with the sticking point still Iran's insistence on enriching
uranium.
But Iranian ally and trading partner Russia was upbeat. Its national
security chief Igor Ivanov said in Tehran Sunday that the proposed pause
could lead "to a political solution of the crisis".
Mohamad ElBaradei, director general of the UN watchdog International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) called Friday for a "timeout"
in the showdown over Iran's nuclear ambitions, with the UN suspending
sanctions and Tehran halting uranium enrichment at the same time.
Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, ElBaradei proposed a
face-saving solution in which the two steps would take place simultaneously
instead of in sequence.
But US, British and German officials all harked back, in comments to
AFP, to the UN Security Council resolution passed on December 23. It
mandates that Iran suspend uranium enrichment, which makes fuel for
civilian nuclear reactors but also atom bomb material, as a precondition
to any steps forward.
A spokesman at Britain's Foreign Office said the Security Council "was
clear and requested Iran to suspend its uranium enrichment and related
processing activities.
The resolution has been passed and we are still waiting for Iran to
comply with it".
US ambassador to the IAEA in Vienna, Gregory Schulte, said: "If
Iran verifiably suspends all enrichment-related and reprocessing activities,
including research and development, then the Security Council will suspend
sanctions."
"Suspension of these activities would help give the world confidence
that Iran's leaders are not seeking the know-how to make highly enriched
uranium for nuclear weapons," Schulte said.
This would lead to talks by world powers with Iran on helping it develop
its nuclear programme in return for guarantees it does not seek nuclear
weapons.
But Iran has made clear it is planning to increase its enrichment capacity
by installing 3,000 centrifuges, the machines which enrich uranium,
at an underground facility in Natanz, where it is already running two
pilot cascades of 164 centrifuges each at a pilot site above-ground.
Iran's national security chief and top nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani
said over the weekend that ElBaradei's proposal needed further examination.
A senior European diplomat in Vienna said, however, "what's happening
at the moment with Iran's rejection of 38 IAEA inspectors is not a good
sign."
The diplomat said that Iran's rejection of inspectors from countries
which backed the Security Council resolution is "in a way undermining
the neutrality and objectivity of the agency and in that sense is very
deplorable."
Non-proliferation analyst Mark Fitzpatrick, from the London think tank
the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), said the key
to ElBaradei's approach "would be that the West would have to take
Iran's word that it had stopped the enrichment activity."
The problem, however, is that "in the past every time a deal to
stop enrichment was made, it was not completed and was only temporary,
so the West does not have much confidence that there will be a real
suspension unless it is verified."
Meanwhile, diplomats in Vienna said it was also not clear to what sort
of suspension ElBaradei was referring.
ElBaradei seems to have left open whether Iran would suspend all enrichment-related
activities, as the United States insists and as the UN resolution states,
or whether it could still spin centrifuges empty of the uranium gas
used to make enriched uranium.
"It is not for ElBaradei to give the details," one diplomat
said.
"ElBaradei is trying to find a middle ground since both sides have
backed themselves into respective corners," the diplomat said.
"The feeler that ElBaradei has put out would have to be negotiated,"
the diplomat said.
AFP
29 1655 GMT 01 07
Copyright© 1999 AFP. All
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