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Eyeing Israel, world powers pressure Iran at IAEA
by Staff Writers
Vienna (AFP) Sept 12, 2012


Russia and China on Wednesday joined Western powers in rounding on Iran at the UN atomic watchdog in a move aimed not only at pressuring Tehran but also persuading Israel that diplomacy must continue.

After days of haggling, the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany hammered out a resolution criticising Tehran, at a meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency's board of governors in Vienna.

It singles out Iran's defiance of UN Security Council resolutions to suspend uranium enrichment, its refusal to allow IAEA inspectors into the Parchin military base and the suspected removal of evidence of nuclear weapons research.

According to a draft seen by AFP, it stresses "once again its serious concern that Iran continues to defy the requirements and obligations contained in the relevant IAEA Board of Governors and UN Security Council Resolutions."

On Tuesday the broad outlines of a text were agreed on, but it had been unclear whether it would become merely a statement to be read out at the 35-nation board meeting or a more significant resolution to go to a vote.

It stops short of a referral of Iran to the Security Council, and the IAEA resolution, likely to be voted on Thursday, is the 12th in nine years.

But it is significant that Western nations were able to get Moscow and Beijing on board as they are traditionally more lenient on Tehran, with China a major buyer of Iranian oil and Russia having close commercial ties with Iran.

One Western diplomat in Vienna told AFP that the resolution was bound to pass, with only two countries still "needing to be convinced."

The draft resolution comes as the European Union is considering imposing more sanctions on the Islamic republic.

The timing is also important since it follows weeks of growing speculation that Israel may bomb the Gulf country's atomic facilities, said Mark Hibbs, analyst at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

The resolution "reflects the desire of member states to underscore that diplomacy is paramount and it warns Israel in two separate paragraphs that the diplomatic process should be supported," Hibbs told AFP.

Israeli frustration has grown at what it sees as a failure by the international community to take seriously the threat posed by Iran or to stop it inching ever closer to "break-out capacity."

In particular, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been pressing US President Barack Obama to identify "red lines" for when it would take action.

"The world tells Israel: Wait, there's still time. And I say: wait for what? Wait until when?" Netanyahu said on Tuesday in comments clearly aimed at the White House.

Obama, running for re-election in November and keen to avoid being depicted as soft on Iran by Republican challenger Mitt Romney, spoke to Netanyahu for an hour by phone in the early hours of Wednesday.

The IAEA's latest report on August 30 said Iran had doubled since May the capacity at the underground Fordo site by installing around 1,000 new centrifuges, although the number of machines operational was unchanged.

Enriched uranium can be used for nuclear power generation or medical purposes but also, when highly purified, in the fissile core of an atomic bomb. Iran says its nuclear programme is peaceful.

The Security Council has also imposed four rounds of sanctions on Iran, while additional US and EU restrictions have also hit Tehran, leading to a halving of Iranian oil exports this year, the International Energy Agency says.

The diplomatic track of talks between the six world powers (the so-called P5+1) and Iran appears deadlocked until at least after the US election, following meetings in Istanbul in April, Baghdad in May and Moscow in June.

The IAEA board includes several members of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM), of which Iran recently assumed the rotating presidency, including Cuba, Ecuador, Egypt, India, Jordan and Saudi Arabia.

The last IAEA board resolution in November, following the publication of a major report on Iran's suspected weapons research, was approved by 32 countries with Indonesia abstaining and only Cuba and Ecuador voting against.

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Israel PM 'meddling' in US vote over Iran: opposition chief
Jerusalem (AFP) Sept 12, 2012 - Israel's opposition leader on Wednesday accused Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of "meddling" in the US presidential election and harming Israel's ties with Washington in a dispute over Iran's nuclear programme.

The remarks by opposition leader Shaul Mofaz came as Netanyahu and the White House locked horns over how to handle Iran's nuclear programme, with Israel threatening unilateral military action against Tehran, despite American objections.

Mofaz said Netanyahu's pursuit of a very public dispute with President Barack Obama over Iran was an attempt to sway voters against the US leader, who faces a challenge from Republican rival Mitt Romney in the November ballot.

"Israeli meddling in internal US affairs and turning the US administration from an ally to 'an enemy' has caused us severe damage," Mofaz charged, at a session of the Israeli parliament, known as the Knesset.

"Please explain to us: who is Israel's greatest enemy -- the US or Iran? Who do you fear more -- (Iranian President Mahmoud) Ahmadinejad or Obama? Which regime is more important to overthrow -- the one in Washington, or in Tehran?" he asked.

"Explain to us, prime minister: what are your 'red lines' for handling the crisis with the United States?" he said in a spin on Netanyahu's repeated demands vis-a-vis Iran's nuclear programme, which Israel and much of the West believes is a drive for weapons.

Over the past 10 days, Netanyahu has repeatedly urged the international community to lay down "clear red lines" to Iran and make clear the consequences of crossing it, in what was widely interpreted as overt criticism of Washington.

"The United States is our greatest friend. It was before you and will be after you: the warm friendship doesn't depend on one president or another," Mofaz said.

"Don't sacrifice our relations with the United States on the altar of Iran's nuclear programme."

Israel has said a nuclear-armed Iran would pose an existential threat to the Jewish state and has wielded the threat of military action, but Washington backs continued diplomatic pressure and says it is not the time for a strike.

On Tuesday, Mofaz said he did not believe Israel would attack Iran this year.

"My assessment is that there won't be Israeli military action (against Iran) in 2012 for all sorts of reasons," he said at an academic college near Tel Aviv, his remarks reported in Wednesday's Yediot Aharonot daily.

"It is still not the time for it, there is no necessity, no international legitimacy and no national legitimacy.

"Israel's capabilities are very good, but they will not bring about a strategic change in Iran's nuclear programme, and will lead to a regional war in the Middle East," he said.

"I think the Netanyahu government and the prime minister himself are leading the campaign against Iran on every media platform for political reasons and for reasons of changing the agenda, and not for reasons of Israel's security.

"If they really intended to do something, this is not how one acts against a strategic threat to the State of Israel."



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NUKEWARS
Obama calls Netanyahu to hear explanation on Iran warning
Washington (AFP) Sept 11, 2012
President Barack Obama called Benjamin Netanyahu Tuesday after he provoked a sudden crisis in relations by warning Washington had no moral right to stop Israel attacking Iran's nuclear program. In an unusual move, Obama called the Prime Minister in the early hours Israel time, after a day of fast-rising tensions, exacerbated when Israeli officials said Obama had snubbed Netanyahu's request f ... read more


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