Of
course Iran will 'curb its ability to develop a nuclear bomb', seeing
as this was never the issue in the first place.
This
is a back-down by the US which is on the back foot; sanctions are
simply not working and Iran has become a power to be reckoned with.
U.S.
signals major shift on Iran nuclear program
The
Obama administration might support letting Iran continue enriching
uranium up to 5% purity if it agrees to other U.N. restrictions.
27
April, 2012
In
what would be a significant concession, Obama administration
officials say they could support allowing Iran to maintain a crucial
element of its disputed nuclear program if Tehran took other major
steps to curb its ability to develop a nuclear bomb.
U.S.
officials said they might agree to let Iran continue enriching
uranium up to 5% purity, which is the upper end of the range for most
civilian uses, if its government agrees to the unrestricted
inspections, strict oversight and numerous safeguards that the United
Nations has long demanded.
Such
a deal would face formidable obstacles. Iran has shown little
willingness to meet international demands. And a shift in the U.S.
position that Iran must halt all enrichment activities is likely to
prompt strong objections from Israeli leaders; the probable
Republican presidential nominee, Mitt Romney; and many members of
Congress.
But
a consensus has gradually emerged among U.S. and other officials that
Iran is unlikely to agree to a complete halt in enrichment.
Maintaining an unconditional demand that it do so could make it
impossible to reach a negotiated deal to stop the country's nuclear
program, thereby avoiding a military attack.
Iran
has produced 210 pounds of 20%-enriched uranium for what it says are
peaceful purposes, according to the U.N.'s International Atomic
Energy Agency, but it has purified about 6 tons at 5% or below.
Uranium is considered weapons grade at about 90% enrichment.
The
question of whether to permit even low enrichment is highly sensitive
for the U.S. government and its allies because of the risk that
Iranian scientists still might be able to gain the knowledge and
experience to someday build a bomb. But administration officials hope
a new negotiating stance, backed by punishing economic sanctions,
could help end the crisis.
The
United States and five other world powers began talks with Iran on
April 14 in Istanbul, Turkey, to try to broker a deal amid threats
from Israel that it will bomb Iranian nuclear installations if the
program isn't dismantled soon.
The
U.S. and its allies were heartened that Iran agreed in Istanbul to
keep talking; at a meeting 15 months earlier, its negotiator had
refused to even discuss the country's nuclear program. Talks are
scheduled to resume in Baghdad on May 23.
At
least publicly, the administration had denied suggestions that it
would consider approving any Iranian enrichment effort. But recently,
some officials had hinted they might be willing to reevaluate that
position, although with numerous caveats.
A
senior administration official said that if Iran fulfills U.S. and
other world powers' demands for strict enforcement of U.N. monitoring
and safeguards, "there can be a discussion" of allowing
low-level domestic enrichment, "and maybe we can get there,
potentially."
But
the official, who declined to be identified because of the
sensitivity of the issue, emphasized that such discussions remained
only a small possibility because Iran has shown so little willingness
to meet international demands.
Gary
Samore, the top White House official on nuclear nonproliferation,
left open the door to Iranian enrichment in recent comments, saying
the decision on which parts of Tehran's program can continue "is
a matter for negotiations."
"We
recognize that Iran has the right to a peaceful nuclear energy
program, once it has addressed concerns about its nuclear
activities," Samore told Radio Free Europe-Radio Liberty on
April 17.
Iran
is a signatory to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, which says
countries have a right to enrich uranium if they comply with rules to
prevent bomb making. The six nations negotiating with Iran have
agreed that the principles of the treaty would guide the discussions.
The
U.S. and other nations are most worried about Iran's small stockpile
of 20%-grade uranium. At that level, the uranium can be refined to
weapons grade with relative ease.
The
so-called P5-plus-1 nations negotiating with Iran — the United
States, China, Russia, France, Britain and Germany — have agreed
that Iran must halt all 20% enrichment and ship that stockpile out of
the country. Iran also must provide full disclosure of previous
nuclear work, and sign and adhere to two additional treaty protocols
that provide for more vigorous oversight, they say.
But
the group now appears to be moving toward allowing lower-level
enrichment, according to diplomats and nonproliferation experts.
That
position is contrary to the mood of many in Congress. Lawmakers in
both houses have begun circulating resolutions, with support from
dozens of members, that demand an end to all Iranian enrichment. One
senior Senate aide involved in the issue said any deal allowing
continued enrichment "would be dead on arrival" in
Congress.
Over
the last several years, Congress has led the push for increasingly
tough sanctions against Iran, and could approve even tougher measures
that would drive Tehran away from any potential deal with the U.S.
and other powers.
Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also remains staunchly opposed. He
argues that letting any centrifuges spin in Iran will allow
scientists there to sharpen their mastery of nuclear science and edge
toward bomb-making capability.
Israeli
officials have talked of attacking Iranian's nuclear facilities
before they are so advanced and hidden so deeply underground that
they are invulnerable to bombs.
But
Defense Minister Ehud Barak, in an interview last month with the
Jerusalem Post, outlined goals that would allow Iran to retain some
low-enriched uranium for nonmilitary purposes. He did not call for an
end to all enrichment.
"There
have been many signals lately that the red line has shifted and
they're no longer pushing for full suspension," said Michael
Singh, who served as President George W. Bush's top Iran advisor and
who strongly opposes allowing Iran to enrich any uranium.
George
Perkovich, a nonproliferation specialist at the Carnegie Endowment
for International Peace, said he was among the U.S. hawks who
believed until recently that "you have to hold the line on
enrichment by Iran."
Now,
he said, "that view has been overtaken by events." Iran has
enriched more uranium, public support for the program is widespread,
and the prospects of giving up all enrichment "has become a
nationalist taboo in Iran."
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