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'Nukes breed nukes,' ElBaradei warns

Head of the UN atomic watchdog Mohamed ElBaradei Photo courtesy AFP
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) May 25, 2006
The head of the UN atomic watchdog warned Thursday that world powers must renounce nuclear arms or accept that more and more countries will manage to secure their own bombs.

"Nukes breed nukes," Mohamed ElBaradei, director of the the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), said in a speech at an international affairs graduate school in Washington.

"As long as some nations continue to insist that nuclear weapons are essential to their security, other nations will want them," said ElBaradei, who won the Nobel Peace Prize last year for his efforts to stem nuclear proliferation.

"We are reaching a fork in the road. Either we must begin moving away from a security system based on nuclear weapons, or we should resign ourselves to President (John F.) Kennedy's 1960s prediction of a world with 20 to 30 nuclear-weapon states," he said.

Painting a gloomy picture, ElBaradei said if existing nuclear powers failed to lead by example and give up the weapons, other states would inevitably seek to join the nuclear club.

"Efforts to control the spread of such weapons will only be delaying the inevitable -- a world in which each country or group has laid claim to its own nuclear weapon," he said.

ElBaradei spoke to the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), part of Johns Hopkins University, a day after holding talks with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and other US officials on Iran's disputed nuclear program.

The meeting came amid speculation ElBaradei was carrying a renewed offer from Iran to hold direct talks with Washington to defuse the standoff over Tehran's nuclear ambitions.

The US administration so far has rejected negotiations with Iran until Tehran suspends its uranium enrichment activities.

Enriched uranium produces fuel for nuclear power reactors but it can also serve as the raw material for atom bombs.

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Differing US views hold up accord with Europe on Iran plan
London (AFP) May 24, 2006
Divisions between top US officials are complicating European efforts to compile a package of incentives to persuade Iran to halt its nuclear ambitions, The Financial Times reported Wednesday.







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