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Russia: Iran's enigmatic ally and key crisis player

Israel wants more Iran sanctions: reports
Israel is lobbying Western powers to impose harsher sanctions on arch-foe Iran after Tehran disclosed the existence of a second uranium enrichment plant, Israeli news reports said on Sunday. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called for more sanctions in a series of phone calls with US congressmen and senators after Iran's announcement, the left-leaning Haaretz daily said. "Action must be taken in all areas to increase pressure on Iran and impose crippling sanctions on it," the report quoted him as saying. "If not now, then when?" On Friday, the International Atomic Energy Agency said Tehran wrote to the IAEA on September 21 disclosing that it is building a new uranium enrichment facility. Tehran's atomic energy chief Ali Akbar Salehi later said the site will operate under IAEA supervision in a move welcomed by Washington. Widely considered the region's sole if undeclared nuclear power, Israel along with the West thinks Iran is trying to develop atomic weapons under the guise of its controversial nuclear programme, a charge Tehran denies.

On Saturday, Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said news of the new site proved Iran was seeking nuclear weapons and demanded an "unequivocal" answer from the six major world powers involved in negotiating over the nuclear dispute. Another Israeli daily, the Maariv broadsheet, quoted Israeli army chief of staff Gabi Ashkenazi as telling close aides that "there is still time to stop Iran from getting nuclear arms with tougher sanctions."

Clinton doubts Iran can show nuclear work is peaceful
The United States doubts Iran can convince the international community next week that its nuclear program is peaceful, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in an interview broadcast Sunday. The chief US diplomat also told CBS television that Iran would not have long hidden its second uranium enrichment plant, which the United States and other powers revealed Friday, if it had been for peaceful purposes. Interviewed in New York on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly, Clinton lowered expectations for a meeting October 1 in Geneva involving Iran, the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany. She has said the plant's discovery gives a sense of urgency to the talks.

"They (the Iranians) have to come to this meeting on October 1st and present convincing evidence as to the purpose of their nuclear program," Clinton said. "We don't believe that they can present convincing evidence that it's only for peaceful purposes, but we are going to put them to the test on October 1st," she added in the interview that was recorded on Friday. Speaking to reporters here on Saturday, Clinton nonetheless welcomed Iran's decision the same day to admit International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors to the newly disclosed uranium enrichment plant. In the CBS interview, she said the time for Iranian explanations was over when asked if there is anything they can say to convince the United States that their program is for electricity and thereby avoid another round of sanctions.

"They can't say anything because they've said that for years but they can open their entire system to the kind of extensive investigation that the facts call for," Clinton said. Asked if that is what is now required of Iran, she replied: "there may be other approaches short of that." Clinton said it is hard to accept "at face value" that the second uranium enrichment plant, near the holy city of Qom, is designed to produce peaceful energy. "This latest incident concerning the facility at Qom, it would have been disclosed were it for peaceful purposes. There would have already been IAEA inspections," Clinton said. "Why was the fact of it not generally known through our working with partners to discover it?" she asked.
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) Sept 27, 2009
Russia, which has the deepest relations with Iran of any big power, is to play a critical role in the Iranian nuclear crisis in the next months as the clock ticks on efforts to find a diplomatic solution.

Moscow is a key supplier of military hardware to Tehran, a reliable trade partner in difficult times and is building Iran's first nuclear power plant -- subtle levers to pressure Tehran which the West does not possess, analysts say.

And after the revelation Iran has been building a secret uranium enrichment site, President Dmitry Medvedev warned Iran at the Pittsburgh G20 that "mechanisms" could come into play if it did not cooperate.

With Western powers warning of a December deadline for Iran to show progress or face further UN sanctions, the crucial question is whether Moscow is prepared to support measures that could cripple the Iranian economy.

According to Rajab Safarov, director of the Centre for Contemporary Iranian Studies in Moscow, Russia has "sufficiently effective levers" to have an effect on Iran's behaviour.

"Iran has an interest in good relations with Russia," Safarov told AFP. "This means that Iran could listen to advice from Russia."

Safarov said that not even Russia has the ability to make Iran halt uranium enrichment operations, which Western powers fear Tehran could use to make a nuclear bomb.

But he said Russia could nudge Iran into "behaving constructively with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and showing great openness."

"If progress is made, the Russians will not support sanctions. But if not, Russia could in principle agree to sanctions."

A Western diplomat in Moscow said the big question is "where will the Russians be" when crunch time comes at the end of the year.

Crucially, Russia has still not fulfilled a 2005 contract to supply Tehran with its S-300 air defence systems which could seriously complicate any plans for a US or Israeli air strike on Iranian nuclear facilities.

Russia's reluctance to supply the missiles to Iran gives it another useful lever to Tehran, Western diplomats say, although mystery surrounds reports a cargo ship allegedly hijacked in July was actually carrying S-300s to Iran.

Analysts have also speculated that Russia could be prepared to give ground over Iran in return for the US change of mind over plans for a missile shield in Eastern Europe.

Russia invited Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to talks in Moscow ahead of the UN General Assembly in a bid to convince him to make concessions but Iran turned the offer down, the respected Kommersant newspaper reported.

Adding to the uncertainty, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, seen by most as Russia's true strongman, has yet to reaffirm Medvedev's apparent tougher line on Iran.

But a major visit by then president Putin in October 2007 to Tehran -- the first by a Kremlin chief since Stalin -- failed to bring about any discernable shift in Iranian policy.

For Viktor Kremenyuk, deputy director of the Institute for US and Canada Studies, Russia and the United States have more in common than differences on Iran as "both are against Iran obtaining nuclear weapons".

"It is the manner of acting to obtain this end that is not the same," he said.

Although Russia is one of few countries to have had robust relations with both the deposed Pahlavi imperial dynasty and the Islamic Republic, relations between Moscow and Tehran have not always been easy, even in modern times.

Russia was a major player in the "Great Game" battle for influence in Persia that is still regarded with cynicism in modern Iran.

Russians for their part painfully remember the killing of one of their greatest playwrights, Alexander Griboyedov, in Tehran in 1829 by a mob incensed by his diplomatic delegation's treatment of harem women.

And while the Soviet Union was not displeased to see pro-US shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi ousted by the 1979 Islamic Revolution, ties turned sour when Moscow began arming Saddam Hussein's Iraq in its war with Iran.

In the early years of the Islamic Republic, "Death to the Soviet Union" was as much a mantra for the faithful as the still familiar "Death to America".

But after the end of the war and the collapse of the Soviet Union, relations improved with Russia emerging as key supplier of civilian and military technology for Iran.

It was Russia that in 1995 signed a contract with Iran to build its first nuclear power station in the southern city of Bushehr, a project expected to go online at the end of the year after numerous delays.

And when turmoil erupted after Iran's disputed presidential elections in June, Ahmadinejad headed to a summit in Russia for the golden photo opportunity of a smiling handshake with Medvedev.

"Russia is the most important partner of Iran in the development of its nuclear programme. No other country in the world is cooperating so much with Iran," said Safarov.

earlier related report
Turkish PM to visit Iran to discuss nuclear spat: report
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he plans to visit Iran next month to help resolve the dispute over Tehran's nuclear programme, Anatolia news agency reported Sunday.

Erdogan also warned that any military attack against Iran would be an act of "insanity."

The announcement of his planned trip came as Iran admitted this week the existence of a previously secret uranium enrichment plant, raising the stakes in its standoff with major powers ahead of talks in Geneva on Thursday.

"I will make a trip to Iran towards the end of October... We will discuss regional problems, including this (nuclear) one," Anatolia quoted Erdogan as saying in New York, where he attended the annual UN General Assembly meeting.

He said Turkey, a NATO member with improving ties with Tehran, was instrumental in arranging Thursday's talks between six world powers powers and Iran, and was ready to do more if its help was requested.

"We are absolutely against nuclear weapons in the Middle East... There is a country in the Middle East which has nuclear weapons," he said, referring to Israel, widely considered the region's sole if undeclared nuclear power.

He also lashed out again at the Jewish state's devastating war on Gaza in December-January.

"Why aren't we talking about this?... It's always Iran... We have to be more fair and honest if we want global peace," he said.

"There are other countries with nuclear weapons. Why aren't we talking about that?... Let's talk about all of them," he said.

Asked about the possibility of US military action against Iran, Turkey's eastern neighbour, Erdogan said "that would be very wrong and not only those who attempt such insanity would suffer."

He said "the process in Iraq must be a lesson," pointing at the ongoing turmoil in the country since the US-led invasion in 2003.

US President Barack Obama has vowed to hold talks with Iran to resolve the nuclear standoff peacefully, but his administration has refused to rule out any military option.

Erdogan's Islamist-rooted government has notably improved ties with Iran since it came to power in 2002 and has sought to help resolve tensions between Iran and the West over the Islamic republic's nuclear ambitions.

Tehran insists its nuclear programme is peaceful and denies accusations that it is seeking to develop an atomic bomb.

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New uranium plant to be under IAEA supervision: Iran
Tehran, Iran (AFP) Sept 26, 2009
Iran's nuclear chief said on Saturday that Tehran will put its newly disclosed uranium enrichment plant under the supervision of the UN atomic watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency. "This site will be under the supervision of the IAEA and will have a maximum of five percent (uranium) enrichment capacity," Ali Akbar Salehi said on state television, adding the plant is "not an ... read more







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