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Iran nuclear resolution could change Middle East: IAEA chief

Iran: France worried by 'dangerous' situation
French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said Wednesday that talks with Iran on its nuclear programme were on the point of breakdown and warned of a "dangerous situation" in the Middle East. Kouchner said that if Iran continued to refuse to respond to a UN-brokered offer to oversee its nuclear enrichment programme then the six world powers leading negotiations would be forced to abandon talks with Tehran.

"The situation is dangerous, in a dangerous Middle East," he told reporters. "It's a bad idea to provoke the Israelis with the potential, putative, in any case unproven existence of nuclear bomb construction," he said, implying that he feared Israel might take unilateral action against Tehran.

Last month, France, Britain, China, Germany, Russia and the United States opened a political dialogue with Iran at talks in Geneva, and last week the UN International Atomic Energy Agency offered Iran a deal on nuclear enrichment. Tehran has yet to formally respond to the offer -- under which it would send its stockpile of uranium abroad to be refined for later use in Iran's medical research reactor -- leading to consternation in Western capitals.

"If the Iranians do not respond to the 5+1 group there will be an effective breakdown in these talks, which got off to a good start in Geneva," Kouchner said, when asked about the Iranian position. "Unfortunately the Iranian government has not responded, neither to the demand on uranium enrichment from Vienna, nor to the idea of a new session of talks in Geneva. If they don't respond, what should we do? Wait? "Yes, we are waiting, but not until the end of the world," he warned.

The French minister was also pessimistic about the situation on the ground in Tehran, after another day of major clashes between Iranian opposition protesters and the Islamic republic's security forces. "I am worried. All of this is not a good omen, a government that represses at home and refuses dialogue outside," he said. "We don't really know the sitiuation in Tehran. We know the demonstrators were very numerous, a big crowd in the middle of Tehran. We don't know if some of them were hurt or died ... but it was a very, very important movement."

by Staff Writers
New York (AFP) Nov 4, 2009
Many of the Middle East's most intractable problems could be solved if Iran accepts a proposed resolution for its controversial nuclear program, the head of the UN nuclear watchdog agency said Wednesday.

"Iran could be the door to a stable Middle East," International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) chief Mohamed ElBaradei told a think tank in New York.

"I think it's very clear if we succeed on that, it would open the way, finally, to a new era, when Iran and the US... can work together," ElBaradei said at the Council on Foreign Relations, listing Iraq and Afghanistan as two areas where Iran could play a hugely constructive role.

He said there was "a unique opportunity. I see it (for) the first time..., a genuine desire on both sides to seriously engage."

However, ElBaradei warned this optimistic scenario depended on Iran signing up to the proposed deal and on Western powers sticking to diplomatic dialogue.

If Israel were to bomb Iran's nuclear facilities that would "turn the Middle East into a ball of fire," he cautioned.

Israel and several Western nations suspect that Tehran aims to build a nuclear weapon. However, Iran says it seeks only civilian nuclear power.

Under the deal brokered by the IAEA, Iran would send its stocks of low-enriched uranium abroad for conversion into nuclear fuel.

World powers led by Washington back the deal as they want to remove Tehran's stock of low-enriched uranium, which they fear could be further enriched by Iran to very high levels and used to make atomic weapons.

The deal would allow Iran to pursue civilian nuclear technology. Tehran denies any ambition to develop a weapons capability.

ElBaradei supported this argument, saying "we have no indication, no concrete proof, that Iran has an ongoing nuclear weapons program."

According to ElBaradei, the nuclear push is motivated by Iran's desire to be taken seriously in the region and to be an international partner.

"Iran's program is an effort to force regional recognition of its power," he said. "They believe the nuclear know-how brings prestige, brings power, and they would like the US to engage them."

The IAEA chief, who will soon step down, said that overly aggressive Western conditions were partly to blame for Iran's refusal to cooperate with the international community over its nuclear program.

"There's a lot of mistrust," he said.

And he warned categorically against a military strike aimed at ridding Iran of its nuclear capabilities.

"I have been saying for many, many years right now that this is no solution at all," he said. "The maximum is that it will delay the program for two years. You cannot bomb knowledge. All it would do is get Iran... to go on a crash course for nuclear weapons."

He said that Iran had huge potential as a constructive regional player, but "can do a lot of damage in that region."

On a broader note, ElBaradei said that the current basis for nuclear non-proliferation, in which the atomic weapons club is restricted to a handful of countries, is unsustainable.

Citing the widely reported existence of an undeclared nuclear arsenal in Israel, he said, "You cannot have a security system that is not perceived to be balanced."

"The only solution is to rid the whole Middle East of weapons of mass destruction, including nuclear weapons," he said.

Likewise, if the United States or Russia want credibility in ridding smaller countries of nuclear weapons, "you have to create an environment in which, in my view, nuclear weapons are regarded in the way we regard slavery or genocide."

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Iran began nuclear arms plants in 2000: opposition
Paris (AFP) Nov 3, 2009
Iran has been building secret nuclear weapons labs separate from its uranium enrichment sites since as early as 2000, the country's main opposition group in exile claimed Tuesday. The People's Mujahedeen, a banned opposition group, has long claimed that Tehran's Islamic government is engaged in illegal weapons development and has urged the international community to impose tough sanctions. ... read more







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