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Iran Rejects US Warning As Nuclear Deadline Nears

The UN Security Council has given Iran an August 31 deadline to suspend all uranium enrichment and reprocessing activities and an impasse looms with Iran insisting it has no intention of abandoning such work.
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) Aug 28, 2006
Iran Monday angrily rejected a US threat to impose sanctions over its contested nuclear programme outside the United Nations as the clock ticked down to a crunch UN deadline for Tehran to suspend sensitive atomic work.

With arch-enemy Israel warning that Iran's uranium enrichment must be stopped for the sake of "world peace", a Thursday deadline neared for Iran to suspend the controversial nuclear activity or face possible sanctions.

US ambassador to the UN John Bolton has said that while Washington was confident of securing a UN consensus over Iran, it was prepared to act unilaterally if a resolution against Tehran was vetoed by Beijing and Moscow.

"Such statements are a blatant insult to the United Nations and the Security Council. They stem from bullying and a lack of principles," government spokesman Gholam Hossein Elham told reporters.

Bolton told the Los Angeles Times newspaper late last week that "everybody's been on board" on the Security Council over Iran but in case Russia and China did not accept any resolution, the United States was working on a parallel diplomatic track.

"You don't need Security Council authority to impose sanctions, just as we have," Bolton said, referring to the raft of economic sanctions the United States imposed on Tehran in the wake of the 1979 Islamic revolution.

Elham scoffed that the comments showed "such people do not deserve to be a member to this council and the organization should reconsider to save its reputation and show it is not an instrument in their hands.

"The ones who sacrifice international law for their greed, dominance and unilateralism better be worried," he said.

The UN Security Council has given Iran an August 31 deadline to suspend all uranium enrichment and reprocessing activities and an impasse looms with Iran insisting it has no intention of abandoning such work.

The Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is to issue a report on that date after verifying whether Tehran has complied with the deadline.

But Iran has also made clear it remains keen to hold talks with all the key players over its nuclear ambitions, including even its foe the United States.

"Iran is ready to hold discussions with the foreign ministers of the five permanent Security Council members and Germany, wherever and whenever," chief nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani said late Sunday.

The United States accuses Iran of using its nuclear programme as cover for a weapons drive, a charge vehemently denied by Tehran which maintains it is solely to provide civilian energy.

The LA Times quoted Bolton as saying the United States planned to put forward a draft resolution imposing penalties such as a travel ban and asset freeze for key Iranian leaders soon after the deadline.

Israel meanwhile kept up its pressure on the international community to act against Iran with Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni urging the world to stop the "threat" it posed.

"The world must understand that it must act so that uranium enrichment is stopped in Iran. This is crucial for world peace," she said after talks in Berlin with her German counterpart Frank-Walter Steinmeier.

Iran is to hold a two day international conference on the Holocaust starting December 11 that will allow historians to present "hidden aspects" of the slaughter of Jews under Nazi Germany, newspapers reported on Monday.

Meanwhile, French President Jacques Chirac urged Tehran to build the "conditions for trust" in the stand-off with Western powers over its nuclear programme.

"I exhort Tehran once more to take the necessary steps in order to create the conditions for trust. There is always room for dialogue," Chirac told an annual gathering of French ambassadors in Paris.

"Iran will not find security by developing clandestine programmes, but by becoming fully part of the international community."

Source: Agence France-Presse

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Israel Says Iran Stalling To Buy Time To Build Nuclear Arsenal
Berlin (AFP) Aug 28, 2006
Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni urged world leaders Monday to confront the "threat" posed by Iran, saying the Islamic state was trying to buy time to build a nuclear weapon. "There is an additional threat, not just for the state of Israel but for the entire international community," she said after talks in Berlin with her German counterpart Frank-Walter Steinmeier.







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