Iran Nuclear NewsGermany set on halting Iran nuclear arms

Germany set on halting Iran nuclear arms

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AP: Germany’s foreign minister said Thursday that the international community remains determined to prevent Iran from developing technology for nuclear weapons, despite U.S. assessments saying Tehran has stopped working on an arms program. The Associated Press

By GEORGE JAHN

VIENNA, Austria (AP) — Germany’s foreign minister said Thursday that the international community remains determined to prevent Iran from developing technology for nuclear weapons, despite U.S. assessments saying Tehran has stopped working on an arms program.

Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier spoke before a briefing by Mohamed ElBaradei, chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency, on the U.N. nuclear agency chief’s recent meeting with top Iranian leaders.

Germany and the five permanent U.N. Security Council members plan to meet Tuesday in Berlin for talks that diplomats say will include attempts to iron out differences on the language and timing of a third set of sanctions for Tehran’s refusal to freeze uranium enrichment and meet other council demands.

“The conflict over Iran’s nuclear program remains … on the agenda,” he said, despite U.S. intelligence assessment last months concluding that Tehran stopped active work on a nuclear weapons program in 2003. “The problem is not solved.”

Urging Iran to “resurrect international confidence” in its nuclear intentions, Steinmeier said the international community “cannot and will not allow that technology for nuclear weapons.”

He was alluding primarily to uranium enrichment, which Iran says it wants for nuclear power but which also can serve to create the fissile core of nuclear warheads. Iran refuses to mothball the program despite two sets of U.N. sanctions.

Russia and China have been more opposed to quick and harsh new sanctions since the new U.S. intelligence estimate.

But Steinmeier papered over those differences, saying ministers attending the Berlin meeting will focus on making sure to express international unity on the need for Iran to heed Security Council demands.

The State Department said Wednesday that Washington had no plans to change its sanctions strategy in dealing with Iran.

“The whole strategy here is to use various kinds of diplomatic pressure at a gradually increasing rate to try to get a different set of decisions out of the Iranian leadership,” spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters.

Officials said Iran promised ElBaradei officials would answer all remaining questions about Tehran’s past nuclear work within four weeks, including secret activities that the U.S. suspects were linked to a weapons program.

The probe originally was slated to be completed in December, and the United States and its allies have been chafing at the delay, according to diplomats accredited to the IAEA. But they are unlikely to object publicly if the extension allows ElBaradei to reveal details of such secret programs.

In agreeing to the IAEA probe last year, Iran agreed to answer all lingering questions about its past nuclear activities — including those it has evaded since 2003, when nearly 20 years of Iranian clandestine atomic work were revealed.

Diplomats have told The Associated Press that the IAEA probe is now using evidence provided by the U.S. and its close allies to back its allegations. One said Sunday that the IAEA recently shared some of the formerly classified information with Iran, with Washington’s permission, to aid with the probe.

Among the material is data on a laptop computer reportedly smuggled out of Iran. In 2005, U.S. intelligence said that information suggested that the country had been working on details for nuclear weapons, including missile trajectories and ideal altitudes for exploding warheads.

The IAEA also is interested in activities at a former research center at Lavizan-Shian, which Iran razed before allowing agency inspectors access. The center is believed to have been the repository of equipment bought by the Iranian military that could be used in a nuclear weapons program.

Associated Press writer Veronika Oleksyn contributed to this report.

On the Net:
http://www.iaea.org

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