Iran Nuclear NewsIran demands right to nuclear technology

Iran demands right to nuclear technology

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AP: Iran might eventually consider suspending uranium enrichment but Tehran’s right to the technology must be recognized, Iran’s top nuclear negotiator said in an interview released Saturday. Associated Press

BERLIN (AP) – Iran might eventually consider suspending uranium enrichment but Tehran’s right to the technology must be recognized, Iran’s top nuclear negotiator said in an interview released Saturday.

Iran rejects the West’s insistence that it suspend enrichment as a condition for the resumption of talks on its nuclear program. Negotiator Ali Larijani did not address that subject when talking with the German newsweekly Focus, but was asked if a suspension was conceivable as an outcome of the negotiations.

“That is not completely ruled out,” Larijani was quoted as saying. “However, we cannot be forbidden the possession of this technology.”

Mohamed ElBaradei, the head of the U.N.’s International Atomic Energy Agency, has called for a “time out” both on enrichment and further U.N. sanctions against Iran.

Larijani said a “time out” would mean that “we maintain our current state of development; in other words, we leave uranium enrichment at the level it is at now,” Focus reported.

“The problem is that we already have the know-how for uranium enrichment; so we cannot go backward at this point,” he was quoted as saying. “It may be that the West does not like that. But that is how it is, and we must negotiate on this basis.”

Asked whether Iran would be prepared to suspend enrichment in exchange for U.S. security guarantees, Larijani replied “we don’t need any security guarantees on the part of the USA,” Focus reported.

“Iran has enough military capacity – without an atomic bomb,” he was quoted as saying.

Tehran insists it wants to develop an enrichment program to generate energy, but the U.S. and some of its allies fear that Iran could misuse it to produce the fissile core of nuclear warheads.

In the Focus interview, Larijani sidestepped a question over IAEA assertions that Iran has slowed the installation of centrifuges used for enrichment.

“We do not play such little games,” he said. “What counts is that Iran, as a reliable partner of the IAEA, keeps to the agreements of the Non-Proliferation Treaty.”

Larijani also argued that U.N. sanctions against Iran would only lead to more hostility on both sides.

“If the Security Council takes an irrational decision against us, we will certainly react,” he was quoted as saying.

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