Western
governments are looking for new ways to put pressure on Iran, despite
the Islamic Republic's latest statement that it’s ready to show
flexibility and resume negotiations on halting higher-grade uranium
enrichment if its conditions are met.
RT,
14
October, 2012
But
Germany wants to continue getting tough, urging the European Union to
heighten its already-crippling sanctions.
On
Sunday, German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle called for Berlin's
Western colleagues to adopt further sanctions against Tehran due to
its refusal to make concessions during talks on its nuclear program
over the past months. This is just a day before a meeting of EU
foreign ministers in Luxembourg, where the bloc could adopt an even
tougher set of sanctions.
Westerwelle
stressed, though, that the P5+1 group (the five permanent members of
the United Nations Security Council plus Germany) remains committed
to a “political solution” to Iran's nuclear energy program, which
some Western governments allege is part of a covert atomic weapons
bid.
The
statement by the German FM come a day after Iran said it will
consider limiting its enrichment of higher-grade uranium.
The
conditions for such a concession, which Iranian Foreign Ministry
spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast laid down on Saturday, included a
“guaranteed supply” of fuel enriched to 20 per cent for use at
the Tehran Research Reactor – and the suspension of economic
sanctions first and foremost.
If
Iran gets already-enriched fuel, the country's officials assert, it
will “voluntarily limit the extent” of its enrichment program.
Iranian
officials stressed that while the country may agree on fuel delivered
from abroad, it still has a right to enrichment – a right that
other governments should recognize.
However,
many Western governments reject such conditions, claiming that an end
to sanctions on Iran's people would remove any motivation for Tehran
to negotiate seriously.
Professor
Seyed Mohammad Marandi of the University of Tehran says that the
pressure and sanctions from Western powers are hurting ordinary
Iranians first of all – and that this is the US and EU objective.
“Increasing
sanctions by the West will only make things more difficult,”
Marandi told RT. “Because
Iranians see the sanctions that are being imposed by the Western
governments as inhuman; the intention is to make ordinary Iranians
suffer.”
Marandi
says tougher sanctions have nothing to do with the Iranian nuclear
program.
“The
Iranians are willing to be more open and allow more intrusive
inspections, and they are willing to talk about enriching uranium
under certain conditions,” he says. “There is a consensus that
this doesn’t have much to do with the nuclear program. The issue is
Iran’s independence. Iran is not the country which would bow down
to Western countries, but Europeans and Americans want Iran to kneel
like Saudi Arabia and other countries in the region.”
Western
powers want Iran, which they suspect of developing a nuclear weapon,
to stop 20 per cent uranium enrichment, despite the fact that nuclear
weapons require uranium to be enriched to a level close to 90 per
cent.
Washington
and Brussels also demand that Tehran shut down its underground Fordow
centrifuge facility near the city of Qom, where enrichment is carried
out.
Iran
denies the allegations that it is developing nuclear weapons,
insisting that its nuclear research is for exclusively civilian
means.
Ahmadinejad to RT: Europe, US need freedom most of all
In
an exclusive interview with RT, Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
pointed out that the 21st century is about knowledge, while nukes are
the means of the past. Iran's view on the "Arab Spring" and
its relations with other countries has also been discussed.

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