A Better Iran Strategy

Washington Post – Editorial: THE CHANCES that the West will succeed in peacefully restraining Iran from building nuclear weapons have been looking dismal at the meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency this week. The agency’s staff reported that Iran was still not fully cooperating with its investigation into the secret uranium enrichment program Tehran began 18 years ago.

On Iran, Bush Weighs a Joint Strategy With the Europeans

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New York Times: President Bush, working to define a common strategy with Europe to get Iran to dismantle its suspected nuclear weapons program, conferred Thursday with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice about what the Iranian government must do as its part of any agreement, according to American and European officials.

U.S. Wants Guarantees on Iran Effort

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Washington Post: The Bush administration is now seeking guarantees from Europe that allies will back punitive measures against Iran if diplomatic talks do not result in agreement by the Islamic republic to permanently abandon any ambitions of developing a nuclear weapon, according to U.S. and European officials.

Iran shows no sign of interest in nuclear talks: Rice

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AFP: Iran has shown “no indication” it is interested in a European-brokered deal to renounce its suspected nuclear arms ambitions, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Thursday. Speaking to reporters after talks with Danish Foreign Minister Stig Moeller, Rice backed the initiative by France, Germany and Britain to offer Tehran incentives if it will give up its suspected nuclear program.

Realism on Iran

Boston Blobe – Editorial: PRESIDENT BUSH should travel more. After recent discussions in Europe with French President Jacques Chirac and German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, Bush told his foreign policy advisers to come up with incentives that the French, Germans, and British could offer to Iran if its clerical regime were to renounce, verifiably, its pursuit of nuclear weapons.

U.S. concerned over Iran meddling in Iraq

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UPI: The White House accused Iran Thursday of trying to
shape Iraq’s transitional government and said such actions needed to stop. Spokesman Scott McClellan did not detail how that influence was being exerted. “We have had increasing concerns about Iran trying to influence the shape of the transitional government,” he said. “This must be an Iraqi process free from outside interference, especially from those
in the neighborhood.”

White House: Iran nuclear tunnels another worrying sign

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AP: The White House says it’s another worrying sign — word from a U-N nuclear agency that Iran is building tunnels to shield its nuclear facilities. Diplomats in Vienna, where the agency’s headquartered, report the tunnels would protect key elements of Iran’s program from air attacks by America or Israel. Press Secretary Scott McClellan says the report raises fresh concerns about Iran’s “behavior” and “intentions.”

Iran Starts Building New Nuclear Plant – Diplomats

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Reuters: Iran has started building a research reactor that could eventually produce enough plutonium for one bomb per year, ignoring calls to scrap the project, diplomats close to the United Nations said on Thursday.

Diplomats: Iran building tunnels for arms

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AP: Fearing airstrikes, Iran is using reenforced materials and tunneling deep underground to store nuclear components – measures meant to make the facility resistant to “bunker busters” and other special weaponry, diplomats said Thursday. The diplomats spoke as a 35-nation meeting of the U.N. atomic watchdog agency ended more than three days of deliberations focusing on Iran and North Korea, which are both accused of seeking to develop nuclear weapons.

A journalist banned from working for two years, a daily suspended and nine journalists summoned

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Reporters Without Borders: Reporters Without Borders condemned government hounding of the press after an independent journalist was given a six-month suspended sentence, a daily newspaper was suspended and nine journalists summoned. A high court in Tehran on 1st March upheld a suspended jail term imposed in March 2004 against Mohammad Hassan Alipour, editor of the daily Aban, along with a two-year ban from working.