World Powers Agree on Sanctions Draft Against Iran,
Ignore Swap Deal
World powers agree on sanctions draft against Iran
MOSCOW, May 19, 2010, (Xinhua) --
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Wednesday that five
permanent members of the UN Security Council and Germany have agreed on
a draft resolution that would impose new sanctions on Iran, the Interfax
reported.
The six countries brokering the peaceful solution to the Iranian
nuclear problem reaffirm their tentative understanding of the UN
Security Council's new draft resolution on Iran, Lavrov told U.S.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton over the phone on Wednesday.
"The Russian side confirmed that the five plus one group's tentative
understanding of the draft resolution remains," the Russian Foreign
Ministry said in a statement.
"During the next stage, work will have to continue within the (UN)
Security Council, where the council's non-permanent members will have a
chance to express their attitude to the draft resolution," Lavrov said.
US hails anti-Iran UN bid, ignores swap
Press TV, Thursday, 20 May 2010, 09:06:11 GMT
US President Barack Obama (R) and his Mexican counterpart Felipe
Calderon
The US president has hailed an anti-Iran UN Security
Council (UNSC) draft resolution, ignoring Tehran's recent declaration on
a nuclear fuel swap deal in Turkey.
"I am pleased that we have
reached an agreement with our P5-plus-one partners on a strong
resolution that we now have shared with our Security Council partners,"
President Barack Obama said in a joint press conference on Wednesday
with his Mexican counterpart Felipe Calderon.
Obama said that
Iran should "uphold its international obligations or face increased
sanctions and pressure including UN sanctions."
The remarks come
days after Iran issued a joint declaration with current UNSC members
Turkey and Brazil announcing Iran's readiness to engage in a nuclear
fuel swap with the West under which Tehran would ship 1,200 kg of its
low-enriched uranium to Turkey in exchange for 120 kg of higher-enriched
uranium it requires for producing medical isotopes in Tehran's Research
Reactor (TRR).
The declaration came as part of a plan to settle
an ongoing dispute over Iran's enrichment program, while supplying fuel
to the TRR for its medical productions mostly dedicated to cancer
patients.
A day after Iran made the announcement; US Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton claimed that the six powers had "reached
agreement on a strong draft with the cooperation of Russia and China."
Clinton's claim came after Russian, Chinese and UN officials
welcomed Tehran's declaration on the nuclear swap in Turkey as a
positive development.
The new draft resolution, details of which
were made public on Wednesday, calls on Iran to suspend its uranium
enrichment activities or face further UN Security Council sanctions.
The draft, if approved, will ban countries from selling new
categories of heavy weaponry to Iran and will impose restrictions on the
country's banking sector.
The US says it is still "seriously
concerned" about the Iranian nuclear program and would continue to push
for more UNSC sanctions.
The US insistence on anti-Iran
sanctions are widely reported to be influenced by powerful pro-Israeli
groups in the US. Obama met Wednesday with a group of Jewish Congressmen
to pledge his commitment to push through the sanctions resolution in the
UNSC.
Iran says any punitive measure against its nuclear work
would be legally baseless and unfair as the country's nuclear program is
being fully monitored by the International Atomic Energy Agency.
AR/CS/MB
Iran doubts West sincerity in swap deal
Press TV, Thu, 20 May 2010 11:46:23 GMT
Iranian Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani has cast doubt on the
sincerity of the West about a proposal to provide fuel for a research
reactor in Tehran.
Larijani said that the West's reaction to a
recent nuclear declaration announced by Iran testified to its
insincerity in nuclear dealings with Tehran.
"Their reaction to
the Tehran declaration proved that they are not sincere in the fuel
swap," he said.
Following the three-way talks between Iran,
Turkey and Brazil, Tehran announced a nuclear declaration on Monday
whereby it would send some 1,200 kg of its low-enriched uranium to
Turkey in exchange for a total of 120 kg of higher enriched uranium.
The declaration came as part of an earlier plan to supply fuel for
the Tehran Research Reactor which produces medical isotopes for cancer
patients.
Iran had earlier refused to ship out its uranium under
the original deal, citing guarantee concerns. Iranian officials,
however, believe that the new declaration can provide Tehran with
objective guarantees over the fuel delivery.
While the UN,
Russia and China hailed the declaration, the US said that Washington and
its allies were "seriously concerned" about the nuclear program although
the transfer of low-enriched uranium outside Iranian soil would be a
positive step.
The US said that it would continue to push for
more sanctions against Iran with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
saying that the six powers discussing Iran's nuclear work had "reached
an agreement on a strong draft."
The new draft resolution, the
details of which were made public on Wednesday, calls on Iran to suspend
its uranium enrichment activities or face further UN Security Council
sanctions.
If ratified, the draft will ban countries from
selling new categories of heavy weaponry to Iran and will impose
restrictions on the country's banking sector.
With the new draft
resolution, Larijani said, the US showed that it was not willing to
bring about change in its foreign policy on Iran.
Iran says the
declaration leaves no excuse for the West to block the nuclear fuel
swap, as Tehran has accepted their prior condition to ship out its
uranium to a third country.
"Their previous excuse was that Iran
has not accepted [their] demand to ship out 1,200 kilograms of its 3.5
percent-enriched uranium. They insistently said that it is Iran that is
avoiding the acceptance of the proposal. Now that we have accepted this
condition, they are creating other excuses," Head of the Atomic Energy
Organization of Iran (AEOI) Ali Akbar Salehi told Press TV on Wednesday.
AR/HGH
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