Yesterday,
they wanted war; now they want to negotiate – I wonder why!
World
powers want new nuclear talks with Iran quickly
Six
world powers agreed on Wednesday to seek renewed talks with Iran as
fast as possible, reflecting a heightened sense of urgency to resolve
a long rift over Tehran's disputed nuclear activity and avert the
threat of war
21
November, 2012
Their
call coincided with growing evidence of Iran expanding nuclear
capacity in an underground bunker virtually impervious to attack and
follows the November 6 re-election of U.S. President Barack Obama,
which has cleared the way for new contacts.
Senior
diplomats from the six countries - the United States, Russia, China,
France, Britain and Germany - met in Brussels on Wednesday to
consider new negotiating tactics despite abiding skepticism that a
deal with Tehran can be reached.
It
was not clear after the meeting what options, if any, were agreed.
But the six said "necessary contact" with the Iranians
would be made "in the coming days".
"The
(six powers) are committed to having another round of talks with Iran
as soon as possible," said a spokesman for EU foreign policy
chief Catherine Ashton, who represents the six countries in dealings
with Iran.
Analysts
warn that a window of opportunity for a negotiated solution is
narrowing because of growing alarm over Tehran's nuclear course in
Israel, the Middle East's only nuclear power which has threatened to
bomb the atomic sites of its arch-enemy.
Any
Israeli air strikes, which many believe would escalate into a wider
Middle East war damaging to a wobbly global economy, are unlikely
before Israel's January 22 election, experts say, giving the six
powers some room for diplomatic maneuver.
"There
certainly is a window to do a deal, but that window is closing, and
closing fast. Ultimately it depends on the Iranians meeting their
international obligations," said Ariel Ratner, a former Obama
administration political appointee on Middle East issues at the State
Department.
By
"obligations", he was referring to U.N. Security Council
resolutions telling Iran to suspend uranium enrichment, the main
pathway to nuclear bomb fuel, and open up to U.N. nuclear inspectors
in exchange for trade and technology benefits.
Seconding
the sense of urgency, Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei
Ryabkov, in remarks quoted by Interfax news agency, said: "There
is no losing time and, from that point of view, the talks were
productive and matters have advanced."
"Under
conditions when trust between Iran and the Sextet is scarce - in fact
it does not exist - the task of reaching a breakthrough finally
regulating the problem is extremely complex," he added. "Had
we not seen any return from what is taking place...we would not be
dealing with it."
Iran's
defiance of the U.N. resolutions, rejecting suspicions that it is
refining uranium for anything other than peaceful energy, has
prompted increasingly harsh sanctions on Tehran.
After
three inconclusive rounds of talks with Iran earlier this year,
Western diplomats say the six negotiators need a new approach to
engineer a deal with the Islamic Republic.
UNDERGROUND
NUCLEAR ENRICHMENT
The
stakes have risen since diplomacy resumed in April after a hiatus of
more than a year, they say, with a U.N. watchdog report last week
showing Iran is set to sharply expand uranium enrichment in its
bunkered Fordow plant.
Iran
denies international accusations it is seeking nuclear weapons and
has so far refused to meet demands to scale back its atomic activity,
insisting on immediate relief from sanctions.
Western
powers have rejected that in previous rounds, instead offering
limited incentives focused on technology cooperation. They have also
ramped up punitive measures intended to get Iran, one of the world's
biggest oil producers and exporters, back to the table for meaningful
talks.
Sanctions
pressure increased last month when European Union governments
tightened restrictions on trading with Tehran and banned imports of
Iranian gas, complementing a crippling embargo on Iranian crude oil
that took full effect on July 1.
Diplomats
say one option being considered by the six powers is to ask Iran for
more concessions while offering more substantial sanctions relief.
"With
more space in Washington and more pressure in Tehran, there might
just be room for a deal," said Jon Wolfsthal, a former adviser
to U.S. Vice President Joe Biden. "Sanctions relief has to be on
the table at some point, but Iran has to be able to get to 'yes'."
In
the earlier meetings this year, the powers called on Iran to stop
producing higher-grade enriched uranium, shut down the Fordow
facility and ship its stockpile abroad.
Iran
rebuffed the proposal, described by Western officials as an initial
step to build confidence, and demanded recognition of its "right"
to refine uranium, activity which can have both civilian and military
purposes, as well as sanctions dropped.
Any
new deal would have to be carefully choreographed to entice Iran to
make concessions while taking into account deep-seated reluctance
among Western governments to ease sanctions.
"The
key is sequencing the significant steps," said Cliff Kupchan, a
Middle East analyst at consultancy Eurasia Group. "My guess is
that's what they (the six powers) will discuss."
Iranian
central bank governor Mahmoud Bahmani told Reuters on Thursday that
it had avoided a "serious dent" to its economy from
sanctions thanks to gold reserves sufficient to last 15 years, high
oil prices and reduced imports.
The
sanctions have caused the rial currency to plummet, inflation to jump
and hundreds of thousands of job losses.
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