[Mb-civic] Iran to shun Europe nuclear deal BBC

Michael Butler michael at michaelbutler.com
Sun Oct 17 10:33:51 PDT 2004


 Iran to shun Europe nuclear deal
 Iran has said it will reject any proposal for a complete halt to its
uranium enrichment activities.

 National security official Hossein Mousavian said Tehran would not be
deprived of its legitimate right to a nuclear fuel cycle.

 Britain, France and Germany are due next week to present an incentives
package aimed at convincing Tehran to give up its nuclear ambitions.

 Iran says its nuclear programmes are peaceful and only to generate power.

 Iran is not prepared for cessation - any package including a cessation of
fuel cycle work would be rejected
  Hossein Mousavian
 Iranian national security official
 
 Correspondents say the US still favours UN sanctions against Iran, but that
it is prepared to give the Europeans a final opportunity to negotiate a
settlement before next month's deadline for compliance set by the
International Atomic Energy Agency.

 Window of opportunity

 Efforts to get Iran to abandon its enrichment activities have been a
failure so far, yet prospects of imposing effective sanctions on Iran
through the UN Security Council are uncertain to say the least, says BBC
News Online's world affairs correspondent Paul Reynolds.

 Mr Mousavian's words appeared to confirm the lack of optimism that an offer
to Iran would work.

 "We would be willing to consider any package that recognises the full right
of Iran to enjoy peaceful nuclear technology within the framework of the
[Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty]," he told AFP news agency.

 "But Iran is not prepared for cessation. Any package including a cessation
of fuel cycle work would be rejected by Iran."

 However, Mr Mousavian said Iran was ready to consider continuing its
suspension of uranium enrichment and discuss new initiatives to provide
guarantees that the process would never be diverted to military purposes.

 Our correspondent says Britain, France and Germany feel there is a window
of opportunity ahead of a meeting of the UN nuclear agency, the
International Atomic Energy Agency, on 25 November.

 The European offer is said to include a pledge to resume EU-Iran trade
talks.

 It is also thought to include guarantees that Iran will have access to
nuclear fuel from Russia.

 Story from BBC NEWS:
 http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/3748776.stm

 Published: 2004/10/16 12:45:55 GMT

 © BBC MMIV



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