Iran
Receives New Offer From Global Powers at Nuclear Talks Amid Iraq Ruin
Iraq,
invaded and occupied in 2003 over concern about weapons of mass
destruction, hosted world powers who today made a revised proposal
intended to avert a potential war over atomic work by its eastern
neighbor Iran.
26
April, 2012
Western
powers and Iran will resume nuclear talks today in Baghdad after a
first day of discussions, according to a Western official.
Chinese,
French, German, Russian, British and U.S. negotiators -- the
so-called P5+1 group -- and Iran’s representatives didn’t issue a
public statement as daylong talks recessed yesterday at almost
midnight. Talks will resume at 8 a.m. Baghdad time, according to the
Western official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the
deliberations are being conducted privately.
The
meeting was convened in an effort to forestall a military strike
against Iran, a prospect Israel hasn’t ruled out. While the Persian
Gulf nation, target of a probe by the United Nations International
Atomic Energy Agency since 2003, denies it wants to make nuclear
weapons, it has refused to cooperate with inspectors and is under
multiple international sanctions.
The
negotiators convened a day after IAEA inspectors bridged an impasse
with Iranian authorities over wider access to suspected nuclear
sites, including the Parchin military complex. IAEA Director General
Yukiya Amano said he expected the accord to be signed “quite soon.”
“It
could take some time before we see that there is really an
agreement,” Olli Heinonen, the IAEA’s former chief Iran inspector
and now a visiting professor at Harvard University, said on Bloomberg
Television’s “Last Word” yesterday. “We have an ample amount
of time, at least until the end of this year, to solve this problem.”
Khamenei’s
Decree
Iran,
which the IAEA said tripled its output of higher- enriched uranium in
February, could build an atomic weapon in months if its leadership
chose to do so, Heinonen said. The IAEA is expected to issue its
quarterly report on Iranian uranium production later this week.
Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad yesterday reiterated Supreme Leader
Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei’s decree that nuclear weapons are
forbidden under the Islamic Republic’s laws.
“Iran
believes the annihilation of all weapons of mass destruction is a
sacred goal and that the security and health of humans depend on it,”
state-run Press TV cited Ahmadinejad as saying. Iran has said its
nuclear program is for civilian purposes.
Iranian
Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi told reporters in Tehran earlier
today that he expected the negotiations to “bring good news.” He
warned that imposing new sanctions on his country would be a “huge
and strategic mistake.”
Before
the Baghdad meeting, U.S. and the EU diplomats ruled out suspending
any of the dozens of financial, trade, insurance and energy-related
sanctions imposed on Iran since November. The nations said they were
willing to offer limited confidence- building measures such as
nuclear-safety assistance, research- reactor fuel, airplane parts and
help fighting drug smugglers in return for concessions.
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