Iran Nuclear NewsWestern powers pressure Iran over nuclear programme

Western powers pressure Iran over nuclear programme

-

ImageReuters: Germany said on Tuesday the international community must push for a faster response from Iran over its nuclear programme, while Washington said a new U.N. report suggested Tehran wanted to acquire nuclear weapons.

By Kerstin Gehmlich

ImageBERLIN (Reuters) – Germany said on Tuesday the international community must push for a faster response from Iran over its nuclear programme, while Washington said a new U.N. report suggested Tehran wanted to acquire nuclear weapons.

France, also reacting to the report on Iran issued on Monday by the U.N. nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, gave cautious backing to the U.S. position.

The report suggested that there were "signs of a possible military dimension" to Iran's nuclear programme, French Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Pascale Andreani told a news briefing.

The IAEA report said Iran's alleged research into nuclear warheads remained a matter of serious concern and Tehran should provide more information on its missile-related activities.

The IAEA also said Tehran was holding back information on high-explosives testing relating to its nuclear programme.

Iran's envoy to the agency, Ali Asghar Soltanieh, said the report showed Tehran's nuclear programme was peaceful.

"Once again it has been explicitly underlined that there has been absolutely no evidence regarding the diversion of Iran's nuclear activities or materials toward military purposes," the semi-official Fars News Agency quoted him as saying.

Iran, the fourth-largest oil exporter, says its nuclear programme is aimed solely at generating electricity and rejects Western assertions that it is secretly pursuing nuclear weapons.

The five permanent U.N. Security Council members plus Germany are offering Iran a package of incentives to give up its uranium enrichment, so far without success.

"Here, open questions remain, where we have to push for an answer with more time pressure," German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier told members of NATO's parliamentary assembly meeting in Berlin, referring to the IAEA report.

White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said the United States "remains concerned" about Tehran's attitude.

"By failing to cooperate fully and transparently with the IAEA on these matters, we can only conclude it wants to preserve the ability to weaponise," she told reporters aboard Air Force One as President George W. Bush flew to a fundraiser.

"This report apparently demonstrates that Iran has not met its international obligations and continues to violate at least the commitments that it committed to."

SECURITY COUNCIL PRESSURE

Germany's Steinmeier said the ball was in Iran's court.

"Either it is picked up there, and we're getting reasonable answers to our questions, or the entry into talks with the aim of a diplomatic solution to the conflict is further delayed."

"The alternative would then be an increase of international pressure, also through the U.N. Security Council."

The IAEA has been pressing Tehran for answers since Western intelligence said Iran had covertly studied how to design atomic bombs. Iran has dismissed the intelligence as baseless.

Iran has been the subject of three United Nations sanctions resolutions since 2006, all demanding that it cease its nuclear enrichment activities, which it has refused to do.

"Over the past three months, we have worked on a renewed offer programme by the international community, which has been put together and which will probably be handed over to Iran during the first half of June," Steinmeier said.

European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana, who is expected to deliver the updated offer, said on Monday he hoped to go to Iran in the next month to discuss the nuclear issue.

(Additional reporting by Brian Rohan and Matt Spetalnick)

(Writing by Kerstin Gehmlich and Dave Graham, editing by Tim Pearce)

 

Latest news

Iran’s Regime’s New Hijab Bill Seeks to Silence Women

On May 21, Ebrahim Raisi’s government approved and sent a bill on "Chastity and Hijab" to Iran’s Parliament (Majlis)....

Iranian Opposition Condemns Release of Tehran’s Convicted Diplomat-Terrorist Assadollah Assadi

The recent prisoner exchange between Belgium and Iran, announced by the government of Oman, has sparked strong condemnation from...

World leaders call on Biden to adopt new Iran policy

In a joint letter, 109 former world leaders signed a letter calling for accountability in Iran and urging U.S....

The Unsettling Child Marriage Epidemic Sweeping Iran

The horrific scene of a man holding the severed head of his 17-year-old wife, Mona Heydari, in southwest Iran,...

How Iran’s Housing Crisis Can Trigger More Protests

Renting a home in Iran has become nearly impossible for tenants who not only have buried their dream of...

Iran’s Budget Deficit Has Doubled

In the absence of statistics from Iran’s Central Bank and despite the government's false claims that the budget for...

Must read

Iran is cheating on the nuclear deal

Iran Focus London, 28 Jul - Writing for The...

Iran stoning case lawyer Mohammad Mostafaei’s relatives arrested

The Guardian: The lawyer defending Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani himself...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you