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NUKEWARS
West must take 'concrete steps' in nuclear talks: Iran
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) May 4, 2012

Clinton urges united front on Iran
Beijing (AFP) May 4, 2012 - US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called Friday on China to show a united front on Iran, as a deadline looms for Washington to slap sanctions on importers of the Islamic republic's oil.

On a visit to Beijing, Clinton said that the United States and China shared the goal of preventing Iran from developing a nuclear weapon, and reiterated that the US wanted a peaceful outcome.

"The best way to achieve the diplomatic solution we all seek is to stay strong and united," Clinton told senior Chinese officials during annual talks, according to her prepared remarks.

"If we ease off the pressure or waver in our resolve, Iran will have less incentive to negotiate in good faith or to take the necessary steps to address the international community's concerns about its nuclear programme," she said.

Israel has led charges that Iran is seeking a nuclear weapon and has not ruled out a military strike. Iran insists that its sensitive uranium work is for peaceful uses.

Under a US law aimed at coaxing Iran into a solution, the United States will impose sanctions starting on June 28 on financial institutions from any nations that keep buying Iran's oil -- the country's key export.

The State Department has already given exemptions to European Union members and Japan, saying they were making major efforts to reduce purchases of Iranian oil.

China and India, a fellow power that is heavily dependent on oil, have both voiced opposition to the US law but have gradually been buying less crude from Iran as the deadline approaches for a US decision on sanctions.

The issue is expected to be high on the agenda when Clinton visits India starting on Sunday.


The West must take concrete confidence-building steps in its nuclear negotiations with Iran, a senior Islamic republic official preparing the next round of talks said Friday, after returning from discussions with China and Russia.

Ali Baqeri, the deputy to Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili, called on "the West to take concrete steps to build trust with the Iranian people," Iranian news agencies reported.

That appeared to echo more explicit demands from Tehran in recent days that the West ease its economic sanctions hitting Iran's oil and finance sectors.

Baqeri said he held "serious discussions" in Beijing and Moscow about the talks between Iran and the P5+1 group comprising the five permanent UN Security Council members plus Germany.

The two sides last month renewed dialogue in Istanbul that had been in limbo for the previous 15 months. Another round of talks is scheduled for May 23 in Baghdad.

Baqeri stressed the "importance of the P5+1 countries' commitments concerning Iran's nuclear rights in the framework of the NPT (the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty) in line with both sides' agreement in the Istanbul talks."

He also noted that both sides aim to move forward on "the basis of a step-by-step approach and reciprocity," and said the outline of that process "will be determined before the Baghdad meeting."

The "step-by-step" formulation relies on each side offering matching compromises at around the same time in an effort to build up trust that has been sorely depleted over past years.

Baqeri's mention of an "agreement" in Istanbul appeared to refer to a mutual understanding, voiced by EU chief policy official Catherine Ashton, that the NPT formed the basis for "a sustained process of serious dialogue."

That would "ensure all the obligations under the NPT are met by Iran while fully respecting Irans right to the peaceful use of nuclear energy," Ashton said after the Istanbul talks.

Although several UN resolutions against Iran demand the Islamic republic suspend all uranium enrichment, there have been hints that the United States could be willing to accept Tehran enriching uranium up to five percent, needed for nuclear energy production.

The question of Iran enriching uranium to 20 percent -- as it is currently doing, ostensibly to make medical isotopes -- is seen by Western powers as a key point of the negotiations. Uranium has to be enriched to 90 percent or above to be used to make atomic warheads.

Other issues include Iran's enrichment activities in a near-impregnable nuclear bunker in Fordo, and the International Atomic Energy Agency being able to conduct more invasive inspections.

For Iran, the focus is on having its enrichment activities recognised and seeing Western economic sanctions and UN sanctions lifted.

World powers will stop nuclear Iran: German FM
Washington (AFP) May 3, 2012 - German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle vowed Thursday that the international community will block Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon, as he underscored Germany's steadfast support for Israel.

"The current Iranian nuclear program represents an enormous danger" not only to Israel but to the region as a whole," Westerwelle told a Jewish advocacy event in Washington.

"We cannot and will not accept an Iranian nuclear weapon... We need substantive and verifiable guarantees that Iran is not pursuing a nuclear weapon."

The West worries Iran is trying to develop an atomic bomb under cover of a civilian energy program, but Tehran insists the program is solely peaceful.

Last month, the so-called P5+1 group -- the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany -- met in Istanbul with Iranian officials to discuss their concerns, with a further meeting set for May 23 in Baghdad.

Despite Israeli concerns that additional talks would be futile, Westerwelle called for further negotiations with Tehran, stressing that "our unity and our resolve are showing results."

At the same time, he made clear that "our patience is limited. We will not accept playing for time."

Westerwelle expressed concern that "the Iranian regime continues to threaten Israel with annihilation."

"I want you to know that we will continue to stand by Israel's side," he told the audience at the American Jewish Committee's Global Forum.

Israel -- widely considered the Middle East's sole, if undeclared, nuclear power -- has consistently warned that a nuclear-armed Iran would pose an existential threat to the Jewish state, and has refused to rule out a preemptive strike.

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Israel's Labour leader slams Netanyahu on Iran
Jerusalem (AFP) May 5, 2012 - The head of Israel's Labour party on Saturday slammed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for presenting a potential nuclear Iran as the Jewish state's greatest threat.

"It is a mistake to make the Iranian threat into Israel's central problem," Shelly Yacimovitch said in a televised interview with privately-owned Channel 2.

Yacimovich said that sanctions on Iran should be afforded more time to yield results, and stressed the need to be "fully coordinated" with the United States on the issue.

"A military strike is always the last option," she said.

Yacimovich, whose party is currently in the opposition, will be facing Netanyahu in elections most likely to be held in September.

Netanyahu has repeatedly stated that a nuclear Iran was an existential threat to Israel.

He was recently subject to scathing criticism mouthed by his former internal security chief Yuval Diskin, who called the premier and Defence Minister Ehud Barak "messianic" and accused the two of misleading the Israeli public into believing that if Israel launches an attack against Iran's nuclear facilities, Iran would not have a nuclear bomb.

Israel, widely considered the sole if undeclared nuclear power in the Middle East, believes a nuclear-armed Iran would pose an existential threat to the Jewish state and refuses to rule out a pre-emptive strike in a bid to halt it.

The international community has slapped a series of tough sanctions on Iran over widely-held suspicions it is seeking a militarised nuclear capability -- a charge which Tehran denies.

Israel has expressed doubt the sanctions will work.



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NUKEWARS
Nuclear powers stress 'urgent' Iran cooperation with IAEA
Vienna (AFP) May 3, 2012
The United States, China, Russia, France and Britain reiterated their call Thursday for Iran to cooperate with the UN nuclear watchdog over its disputed nuclear programme. "We remain concerned by Iran's persistent failure to comply with its obligations under UNSC (UN Security Council) resolutions and to meet the requirements of the IAEA Board of Governors Resolutions," the five powers said i ... read more


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