The latest News

Human Rights

Articles







2005 Wednesday 21 December

US and Europe step up planning against Iran

WASHINGTON- Reuters-Faced with an increasingly hard line from Iran, the United States and Europe have stepped up planning for tougher diplomatic action should Teheran follow through on threats to resume critical nuclear activities, according to US officials and European diplomats.

The US and its European allies are seeking agreement among themselves on precisely when Iran’s nuclear programme will have progressed to the point that the matter should be taken to the UN Security Council and what kinds of sanctions might be pursued there, the officials and diplomats said.

Teheran insists it only aims to produce civilian nuclear energy. Allies say the programme is to produce weapons.

Russia, which is building Iran’s nuclear power plant at Bushehr in southern Iran, remains a serious impediment. The United States fears that weapons grade plutonium could be extracted from the Bushehr reactor once it goes on line.

The United States and major European nations’ Britain, France and Germany ‘ have long threatened to bring the issue to the UN Security Council for possible sanctions.

But negotiations appear at an impasse and new Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has alarmed the world with aggressive calls for Israel to be « wiped off the map ».

Increasingly, we feel the Iranians are just not interested in any sort of privately negotiated solution to this problem, that what they are interested in is a political confrontation over it, one European diplomat told Reuters.

Under the nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty, which Iran signed, member states are guaranteed the right to develop a full nuclear fuel cycle but are banned from making weapons.

The Bush administration is under growing pressure from Congress and pro-Israel groups, who accuse the administration of softening its stance toward Teheran. They want the nuclear issue referred to the UN Security Council, where sanctions could be imposed. US Undersecretary of State Robert Joseph, who oversees nonproliferation issues, was in Europe this week for meetings that included discussions on Iran.

US and European experts are to meet Iran next week to see if negotiations can resume, but the outlook is pessimistic.

I think there are a lot of different pieces moving toward an interesting point on Iran, especially the nuclear piece, a US official said.

A pro-Israel advocate said administration officials are considering harder approaches. Things are moving on a faster track.

A second European diplomat said while there was a US trend to toughen the position on Iran, some Europeans preferred to keeping trying to draw Russia into a unified position.

Efforts to halt Iran’s nuclear programme would suffer if the issue was moved to the Security Council and the council was too divided to take action, some analysts said.


Français | Deutsch
فارسی




© copyright 2004 - 2008 IranPressNews.com All Rights Reserved