Just
to demonstrate that Hitlery Clinton was not as bad as it gets, John
Kerry is ratcheting up the pressure.
UN,
US ratchet up pressure over Iranian nuclear program
4
March, 2013
The
UN nuclear watchdog head urged Iran to allow inspectors to access the
Parachin military site, where nuclear weapons-related tests may have
been conducted. The top US diplomat also warned time was running out
for talks on Iran’s nuclear program.
Director
General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Yukiya Amano
told the IAEA's governing board on Monday that he was “unable
to report any progress” since early 2012 on Iran’s
disputed uranium enrichment program, Reuters reported.
He also called for immediate access to Parachin, a vast military complex just southeast of Tehran, without further negotiations. The IAEA suspects the Islamic Republic built an explosives chamber to conduct nuclear weapons tests at Parachin; Iran has denied the claim.
The agency sent a delegation to Tehran last month to hold talks ob the possible resumption of site inspections, though Iran was not amenable to the request.
"Providing access to the Parchin site would be a positive step which would help to demonstrate Iran's willingness to engage with the agency on the substance of our concerns," Reuters quoted Amano as saying.
The IAEA has not had access to Parchin since 2005. Amano said the agency remained committed to negotiations, but insisted future talks should be carried out with "a sense of urgency and a focus on achieving concrete results."
He also called for immediate access to Parachin, a vast military complex just southeast of Tehran, without further negotiations. The IAEA suspects the Islamic Republic built an explosives chamber to conduct nuclear weapons tests at Parachin; Iran has denied the claim.
The agency sent a delegation to Tehran last month to hold talks ob the possible resumption of site inspections, though Iran was not amenable to the request.
"Providing access to the Parchin site would be a positive step which would help to demonstrate Iran's willingness to engage with the agency on the substance of our concerns," Reuters quoted Amano as saying.
The IAEA has not had access to Parchin since 2005. Amano said the agency remained committed to negotiations, but insisted future talks should be carried out with "a sense of urgency and a focus on achieving concrete results."
‘Window on Iran will not be unlimited’
During
a press conference with his Saudi counterpart in Riydah on Monday, US
Secretary of State John Kerry similarly warned "there is
a finite amount of time" regarding negotiations over
Iran’s disputed nuclear program.
“It
is absolutely not unlimited,” Kerry said, speaking on the timetable
for finding a solution. “Talks
will not go on for the sake of talks and talks cannot become an
instrument for delay that will make the situation more dangerous."
Kerry
reminded Tehran that President Barack Obama had left all options on
the table, including military action, to prevent Iran from obtaining
a nuclear weapon. However, he stopped short of offering any concrete
timetable for further US action.
U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry (L) and his Saudi counterpart Prince
Saud al-Faisal hold a press conference at the press hall in the
Saudi Foreign Ministry in Riyadh, on March 4, 2013. (AFP Photo)
Israel
has long pushed the White House to use military force to halt Iran’s
suspected nuclear weapon program, demands which have mostly been
rejected by the Obama administration.
Kerry’s
comments come less than a week after six world powers – the US, UK,
France, Germany, Russia and China – and Iran gathered in Kazakhstan
for inconclusive talks on Iran’s uranium enrichment program.
Israel,
which has regularly threatened to launch a pre-emptive strike against
Iranian nuclear facilities if diplomacy yields no results, signaled
its dissatisfaction with the results of the six-party talks.
"My
impression from these talks is that the only thing that is gained
from them is a buying of time, and through this time-buying Iran
intends to continue enriching nuclear material for an atomic bomb and
is indeed getting closer to this goal," Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday.
On
Monday, Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud Faisal further claimed
that Tehran did not appear sufficiently committed to the negotiations
in Almaty.
"We
can't be like philosophers who keep talking – we have to talk
seriously and honestly and we have to put in our commitment clearly
on the table."
The
so-called P5+1 group offered a limited easing of sanctions against
Iran if the Republic agreed to suspend 20-percent uranium enrichment
and freeze work at its Fordo underground facility. The talks are
scheduled to continue on a technical level in Istanbul, before
resuming in Kazakhstan on April 5.
Iran
has long maintained that its uranium enrichment program is solely for
peaceful purposes, such as generating electricity.
On
Sunday, Iran announced it was building 3,000 advanced centrifuges for
enriching uranium. Fereydoon Abbasi, the head of Iran’s Atomic
Energy Organization, stressed the new generation of centrifuges were
developed for the enrichment of uranium below 5 percent, and cannot
be used for 20-percent enrichment.
The
announcement drew condemnation from Western powers.
'Iran approaching red line'
On
Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the American
Israel Public Affairs Committee – the largest pro-Israel lobby in
the US –that Iran was “running out the clock” on
diplomatic efforts in order to "to buy time to press
ahead with its nuclear program."
“Iran enriches more and more uranium, it installs faster and faster centrifuges…“We have to stop its nuclear enrichment program before it’s too late,” he warned in a speech via satellite from his office in Israel, AFP reports.
“It’s still not crossed the red line I drew with the United Nations last September,” Netanyahu said in reference to the point where Israel believes Iran would be able to build a nuclear weapon.
“But Iran is getting closer to that red line, and it is putting itself in a position to cross that line very quickly once it decides to do so.”
Netanyahu reiterated previous warnings that ongoing efforts must be “coupled with a clear and credible military threat if diplomacy and sanctions fail.”
“Iran enriches more and more uranium, it installs faster and faster centrifuges…“We have to stop its nuclear enrichment program before it’s too late,” he warned in a speech via satellite from his office in Israel, AFP reports.
“It’s still not crossed the red line I drew with the United Nations last September,” Netanyahu said in reference to the point where Israel believes Iran would be able to build a nuclear weapon.
“But Iran is getting closer to that red line, and it is putting itself in a position to cross that line very quickly once it decides to do so.”
Netanyahu reiterated previous warnings that ongoing efforts must be “coupled with a clear and credible military threat if diplomacy and sanctions fail.”
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