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NUKEWARS
Ahmadinejad courts leftist Latin support in Bolivia
by Staff Writers
La Paz (AFP) June 19, 2012


'Significant gaps' with Iran in nuclear talks: EU
Moscow (AFP) June 19, 2012 - Significant gaps still exist between Iran and world powers in the standoff over Tehran's disputed nuclear programme, the EU foreign policy chief said Tuesday after two days of talks in Moscow.

"It remains clear that there are significant gaps between the substance of the two positions," EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton told reporters after what she said were "tough and frank" exchanges.

She said an expert-level meeting would take place on July 3 in Istanbul with a higher-level meeting involving herself and chief Iranian negotiator Saeed Jalili to follow at an unspecified later date.

The world powers are the so-called "P5+1" -- permanent UN Security Council members Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States, plus Germany -- with their negotiating team led by Ashton.

Ashton said the world powers reaffirmed their demands for Iran to stop enriching uranium to 20-percent purity, ship out the existing stock of such material, and shut down its heavily-fortified Fordo enrichment facility.

"The choice is Iran's," she said.

"We expect Iran to decide whether it is willing to make diplomacy work, to focus on reaching agreement on concrete confidence-building steps, and to address the concerns of the international community."

Ashton said that for the first time in their talks the Iranian side had addressed the substance of the crisis but made clear there had been no sign of a breakthrough in the Moscow meeting.

"In the last session, Dr Jalili and I spoke about the fact that nobody in that room wants talks for talks' sake."

"And the fact is that they (Iran) did begin to address the substance for the first time but there is a very long way to go."

Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad stopped in Bolivia Tuesday en route to a summit in Brazil, to court support from another leftist Latin American nation which has tense ties with the United States.

Ahmadinejad had a warm welcome at the airport high in the Andes from his Bolivian counterpart President Evo Morales. Then they headed to the Palacio Quemado presidential palace to hold meetings on cooperation deals.

Bilateral cooperation investment in recent years has topped one billion dollars with projects in farming, mining, oil and gas, and health care.

Iran also is considering mining lithium at Bolivia's Salar de Uyuni, the world's biggest deposit of the mineral used in laptop and electric car batteries.

Three indigenous people's groups close to the government -- Morales is Bolivia's first democratically elected indigenous president -- issued a statement of support for Ahmadinejad and his solidarity with South America's poorest nation.

Iran has courted warm ties with Latin leftists who are critical of the US role in international relations. Topping the list is Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, as well as Morales and Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega.

"The long age of colonial exploitation is the result of the attitude and actions of greedy governments and states that want to stop others from developing, and from exercising freedom," Ahmadinejad said in a speech alongside Morales.

At his airport welcome more than 100 indigenous protesters waved Bolivian and Iranian flags, with one local farmer holding a banner reading "Yes to Iran's nuclear program."

The visit came as Iran and world powers failed to narrow differences over the Iran's nuclear program after talks in Moscow held amid threats of a crippling oil embargo or even military action against Tehran.

Iran's negotiating team and world powers led by EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton nevertheless kept talks alive by agreeing a process for future meetings. The Moscow meeting was seen as a crucial last test for the viability of talks.

The summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil is a 10-day Conference on Sustainable Development, the 20-year followup to the 1992 Earth Summit that is a landmark in environmentalism.

After that meeting, the Iranian president was due to visit Chavez in Venezuela.

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