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Iran, IAEA talks under scrutiny ahead of Baghdad
by Staff Writers
Vienna (AFP) May 12, 2012


World powers will on Monday be closely following Iran's first talks with the UN nuclear agency in three months, for clues on whether Tehran means business at an upcoming crunch meeting in Baghdad.

The last time that Iran's envoy to the International Atomic Energy Agency, Ali Asghar Soltanieh, and chief inspector Hermann Nackaerts met officially was in early February on the second of two fruitless IAEA visits to Tehran.

Soltanieh said the resumption of the talks "proves Iran's determination to cooperate with the agency, confirms that claims against Iran are baseless, and shows that all of the Islamic republic's nuclear activities are peaceful."

The two days of discussions behind closed doors in Vienna "will be a good test of Iran's intentions in the whole (nuclear) issue," Bruno Tertrais, senior research fellow at the Foundation for Strategic Research in Paris, told AFP.

"The world powers will be watching closely to see if there are any signs of Iran shifting its position and becoming more accommodating," agreed Mark Fitzpatrick of the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London.

He cautioned however that any signs that Iran was using cooperation with the IAEA as a "bargaining chip" ahead would "get the Baghdad discussions off to a bad start".

The IAEA said after the latest visit -- branded a "failure" by Washington -- that "major differences" existed with Tehran on how to ease suspicions that Iran's nuclear programme is not, as it claims, purely peaceful.

In particular, the agency said that Iran had refused Nackaerts access to the Parchin military site near Tehran where a major IAEA report in November alleged Iran had conducted suspicious explosives tests in a large metal container.

That extensive report focused on a number of areas where the IAEA believes Iran carried out activities the agency said could only conceivably be aimed at developing nuclear weapons, at least until 2003 and possibly since.

During the visits, Iranian officials stuck doggedly to their assertion that the report, which has prompted Western countries to ramp up sanctions and raised speculation of Israeli plans for air strikes, was based on forgeries.

But since February, hopes have emerged that with new US and EU sanctions due to bite from mid-2012, Iran's approach has changed.

Iran and the P5+1 world powers -- Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States plus Germany -- held their first talks in 15 months in Istanbul in April. They were hailed by EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton as "constructive and useful".

Agreeing to meet again in May, the White House applauded what it called the Iranians' "positive attitude", while Iran's envoy Saeed Jalili praised the "desire of the other side for dialogue and cooperation".

Monday and Tuesday's talks in Vienna could give early clues on whether these good vibrations will continue in Baghdad on May 23, when the P5+1 want to get down to the nuts and bolts of the almost decade-old dispute over Iran's nuclear programme.

In particular, they want Iran to suspend the enrichment of uranium to purities of 20 percent, most notably at the Fordo site inside a mountain near the holy city of Qom. Uranium enriched to 90 percent can be used in a nuclear bomb.

They also want Iran to submit to more intrusive IAEA inspections by implementing the "additional protocol" that as a signatory of the nuclear non-proliferation treaty (NPT) Tehran briefly adhered to but dropped in 2006.

Tehran's aims are international acceptance of its right to peaceful nuclear activities, for sanctions to be lifted and for the threat of Israeli military action to disappear. It also wants to be reassured, after decades of mutual mistrust, that the West is not seeking regime change.

But vital in building confidence will be Iran addressing at least some of the IAEA's evidence of weaponisation, David Albright from the Institute for Science and International Security and former IAEA inspector Olli Heinonen said in a joint report.

"If Iran does not start providing clarifications about the military dimension of its efforts, it risks poisoning the negotiations with the P5+1 and makes military strikes that much more likely," they warned.

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Ex-French PM arrives in Tehran on unofficial visit
Tehran (AFP) May 12, 2012 - Former French socialist prime minister Michel Rocard arrived in Tehran early Saturday on an unofficial three-day visit to meet with several ranking Iranian officials, diplomats said.

Rocard, whose trip was not coordinated by the French foreign ministry, may meet Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi and top nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili, French daily Le Figaro reported quoting his entourage.

The visit, first planned for April but postponed after the 81-year-old Rocard was hospitalised in Stockholm in late March, comes days after the May 6 election of socialist Francois Hollande as France's president.

According to Le Figaro, the visit aims at "boosting relations" between Paris and Tehran, which were seriously strained under the presidency of Nicolas Sarkozy.

"We hope his visit will facilitate fresh contacts between the next French government and Iran," Michel Dubois, an aide who is accompanying Rocard during his visit, told Le Figaro.

The paper said it was not clear whether Rocard is carrying a message from Hollande for Iranian officials.

Rocard's visit comes as Iran is preparing for a new round of talks with world powers in Baghdad on May 23 that will focus on its disputed nuclear programme.

France under Sarkozy was the strong voice in the European Union to advocate harsh US-backed economic sanctions against Iran over Western suspicions it seeks a weapons capability masked by its civilian nuclear programme.

France also became one of the most vocal critics of human rights violations in Iran, including the regime's crackdown on opposition supporters, activists and journalists in the aftermath of a disputed re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2009.

Tensions between the two countries were exacerbated by the July 2009 arrest of Clotilde Reiss, a young French lecturer at the University of Isfahan accused of attending anti-government protests and convicted on espionage charges before being released on bail in May 2010.

In recent months, France greatly reduced its diplomatic mission in Tehran and shut down its cultural and economic sections following the ransacking of the British embassy by pro-regime protesters in December.

On Monday Iran expressed hope that Hollande's presidency would usher in a "new era" in its relations with Paris.

Hollande, however, had said in his election campaign that if elected, France would maintain its "firm position" on Iran, whose nuclear work "is a vital danger for Israel and peace in the world."

Iran insists its nuclear programme is entirely peaceful, with its supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, calling the possession of atomic weapons "a great sin."

But the United States and many of its EU allies believe Iran has been working towards developing a nuclear weapons capability. The EU is poised to enact sanctions Sarkozy pushed to be imposed on Iranian oil on July 1.



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NUKEWARS
EU's Ashton discusses Iran talks with Israel PM
Jerusalem (AFP) May 9, 2012
EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton met Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday to discuss the upcoming nuclear talks between world powers and Iran, an Israeli official told AFP. Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, Defence Minister Ehud Barak and incoming vice premier and Kadima party head Shaul Mofaz, who on Tuesday agreed to join the ruling Likud party in a unity gover ... read more


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