Iran Nuclear NewsTalks yield no new sanctions against Iran's nuclear program

Talks yield no new sanctions against Iran’s nuclear program

-

ImageLos Angeles Times: World powers this week failed to come up with a unified strategy to press Iran on halting controversial elements of its nuclear program, as a report emerged suggesting the country had made progress in advancing a little-examined feature of its atomic infrastructure.

The Los Angeles Times

U.S. and other powers fail to reach a deal on ways to press Iran to halt uranium enrichment, even as a report suggests Tehran has made key progress on a heavy-water research reactor.

By Borzou Daragahi

ImageReporting from Beirut — World powers this week failed to come up with a unified strategy to press Iran on halting controversial elements of its nuclear program, as a report emerged suggesting the country had made progress in advancing a little-examined feature of its atomic infrastructure.

Diplomats said Friday that American, European, Russian and Chinese officials meeting the day before in Paris had not reached agreement on further steps to pressure Iran to halt uranium enrichment at its facility in Natanz. Enrichment is a highly technical process that can produce fuel for a nuclear power plant or fissile material for atomic weapons.

After the talks ended without any new measures to announce, the French Foreign Ministry released a statement saying the international community had "reaffirmed the importance of the dual-track approach" of engaging diplomatically with Iran and pressing for sanctions.

Moscow's Interfax news agency quoted Russian diplomat Sergei Ryabkov, who attended the meeting, as saying the parties had struck no deal on sanctions. "The Western countries are for the sanctions," he was quoted as saying. "China, like Russia, did not back it."

Meanwhile, a report released this week says Iran has made significant progress at another facility: a heavy-water research reactor being built near the city of Arak, which could eventually produce plutonium that might be used in a nuclear weapon.

According to satellite images published by the Institute for Science and International Security, construction at the Arak plant progressed significantly between February and October.

"It's slipped everyone's notice," said David Albright, a former arms inspector and president of the Washington-based institute. "If you look at the satellite image, it's really making progress. In a year and a half, it's gone from building frames to largely finished."

Iran says it is pursuing nuclear technology to produce energy and conduct research. But the U.S. and its Western allies suspect that Tehran's efforts to produce low-grade uranium, legal under international arms control regulations, is a precursor to creating a weapons infrastructure.

The latest developments show the complex diplomatic and technical challenges the team of President-elect Barack Obama will face in trying to stop Iran from mastering technology that could be used to make and use nuclear weapons.

The Bush administration in its waning months has managed to synchronize its policies with the European Union, along with British, French and German leaders, in pressing for tougher sanctions and diplomacy against Iran. The International Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nations' nuclear monitor, is expected to release a report critical of Iran next week.

But with no new initiative emerging from the Paris talks, hopes of imposing another set of U.N. Security Council sanctions before the end of President Bush's term are fading.

Russia and China, which hold veto power on the Security Council, have resisted new sanctions. Unlike Washington, Moscow and Beijing have close political and business ties with Iran and feel no domestic pressure to act against the Islamic Republic.

Amid the diplomatic maneuvering, Tehran continues to edge forward in nuclear and missile skills. Some Israeli officials have voiced alarm about Iran's test-firing this week of a solid-fuel, two-stage rocket with a range of 1,200 miles. Tel Aviv is about 650 miles from Iran.

"This is a whole new missile," Uzi Rubin, an Israeli missile expert, told Jane's, the British-based defense and military publication.

"It demonstrates a significant leap in Iran's missile capabilities," Rubin said.

IAEA inspectors predict the heavy-water reactor near Arak won't be completed until 2011. Such plants produce relatively large quantities of weapons-grade plutonium that can be extracted from spent uranium fuel through a type of reprocessing plant that Iran neither has nor says it wants.But in its Nov. 13 report, posted at www.isisnucleariran.org, the Institute for Science and International Security cites evidence gathered by IAEA inspectors that suggests Iran could be planning such a facility, which is relatively easy to build.

"Will Iran separate out the plutonium?" Albright asked. "It's committed not to do so, but there's a question of whether they'll stick to that."

Albright says the Arak plant could potentially produce about 20 pounds of plutonium a year, enough for two nuclear weapons. Physicists say it is easier to design and build a nuclear weapon using plutonium than one using enriched uranium.

Daragahi is a Times staff writer.

Latest news

Iran’s Regime Sentences Singer Toomaj Salehi to Death

Amir Reisian, Toomaj Salehi’s lawyer, says the so-called “Revolutionary Court” in an "unprecedented" move has sentenced this dissident singer...

Iran Faces Severe Medicine Shortage and Lack of Government Funding

The Health and Treatment Commission of Iranian regime’s Majlis (parliament) recently released a report highlighting the dire situation of...

U.S. House of Representatives and Senate Approve Measures Targeting Iran’s Regime

In a resolute move showcasing bipartisan unity towards addressing the Iranian regime's actions, the United States House of Representatives...

Grossi: Iran Weeks Away from Having Enough Enriched Uranium for Atomic Bomb

Rafael Grossi, the Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), has stated that Iran is just weeks...

In the past two years, 8 million people added to Iran’s poor population

According to information analyzed by the state-run Etemad newspaper regarding poverty rate data, a 10% increase in the poverty...

Iran: 9 Prisoners Executed in One Day

The Iranian regime executed five prisoners in Kerman prison and two prisoners in Chabahar prison on April 21. At...

Must read

Demonstration outside Danish embassy in Iran capital

Iran Focus: Tehran, Iran, Feb. 20 – Several dozen...

Despite calls to halt, Iran says it will continue its nuclear program

New York Times: Speaking just days before a deadline...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you