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US-Iran engagement must seek nuclear curbs: Senate report

Democratic Senator John Kerry.

German firms pressed to cut trade with Iran: report
Germany's government is piling huge pressure on firms to cut business with Iran as part of international efforts to press Tehran over its disputed nuclear programme, a press report said Thursday. Germany has traditionally been one of Iran's biggest trading partners. Exports to Iran grew 8.3 percent in 2008 to reach 3.9 billion euros (5.2 billion dollars), according to official statistics. But the economy ministry called on German firms in a letter dated April 27 not to participate in two recent events attended by Iranian delegations aimed at promoting their wares, the Handelsblatt business daily reported. "These events stand in clear contrast to the policy of the federal government and could mean serious damage for German foreign policy," the paper cited the letter to the German association promoting trade with the Middle East (Numov) as saying. The chairman of Numov is former chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, who drew fire for a recent visit to Iran and who has also been criticised for being cosy with Russia. The pressure is bearing fruit, Handelsblatt said, with trade between Germany and Iran falling 30 percent in January compared with a year earlier, although trade with other countries is growing. The German government said in January it would drastically cut its export guarantees for companies trading with Iran after sharp criticism from the United States and Israel. Germany is one of six powers -- with the United States, China, France, Britain and Russia -- trying to persuade Tehran to abandon its nuclear programme, fearing that Iran wants to develop atomic weapons. The UN Security Council has slapped three sets of sanctions on Iran, which insists its nuclear activities are merely for civilian purposes.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) May 6, 2009
US engagement with Iran must convince Tehran to halt progress in its ability to build a nuclear bomb and accept tough international controls, according to a US Senate report out Thursday.

"The ultimate solution to the conundrum of Iran's nuclear ambitions is not technical, but political," investigators told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which is led by Democratic Senator John Kerry.

"Only a political decision by the country's leaders is likely to prevent Iran from someday producing a nuclear weapon. And that decision is inherently reversible," as long as Iran retains the ability to enrich uranium, they said in the 11-page body of the report.

The document came after Kerry held a series of hearings on Obama's planned engagement with the Islamic republic, a move the Massachusetts senator and former presidential hopeful supports.

"At a minimum, one goal of the administration's strategy on Iran should be to provide the right balance of pressure and opportunity to persuade the regime to agree not to take any further steps toward enhancing its capability to build a bomb and to accept strict verification standards," the report said.

Kerry said the document aimed to address some of the suspicions that Tehran seeks a nuclear arsenal under cover of what it insists is a civilian atomic energy program, which he called a key obstacle to better US-Iran ties.

The report collected findings from unclassified reports as well as from research in Austria -- home to the UN nuclear watchdog agency -- and Israel, which has taken a more dire view of Iran's atomic ambitions than Washington.

Some non-US intelligence analysts and nuclear experts agreed with US findings that Iran halted its nuclear weapons program in late 2003 but warned that the Islamic republic had only frozen the project until it had enough of the nuclear material needed to build a bomb.

"Iran had produced a suitable design, manufactured some components and conducted enough successful explosives tests to put the project on the shelf until it manufactured the fissile material required for several weapons," they told the US Senate investigators.

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US talks with Iran pose no threat to Arab allies: Gates
Riyadh (AFP) May 6, 2009
US Defence Secretary Robert Gates on Tuesday said Arab fears of a possible "grand bargain" between Iran and the United States were unlikely and that Washington would not abandon its long-time regional allies.







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