Iran urges EU to resume nuclear talks
Iran urged the European Union yesterday to resume talks on its nuclear dispute with the West, drawing a chilly response from Britain and Russia. A senior British official dismissed as "vacuous" the Iranian offer, contained in a letter from Javad...
Iran urged the European Union yesterday to resume talks on its nuclear dispute with the West, drawing a chilly response from Britain and Russia.
A senior British official dismissed as "vacuous" the Iranian offer, contained in a letter from Javad Vaeedi, deputy head of Iran's Supreme National Security Council.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Tehran should first restore the basis for negotiations by halting the nuclear fuel research it resumed last week in defiance of world powers.
"Talks presuppose an obligation. The Iranian obligation was to stick to the moratorium," Mr Lavrov said. "Now Iran (has departed from) the moratorium on scientific research."
Britain, France and Germany called off the talks last week after Tehran removed UN seals on uranium enrichment equipment, deepening Western suspicions that it is seeking nuclear arms.
Washington and its EU allies say it is time the UN nuclear watchdog agency sent Iran's case to the UN Security Council, which could eventually decide to impose sanctions on Iran.
China has demurred, saying it would like talks between Iran and the EU trio to resume, but has not said it will try to block any move to report Iran to the Council.
Russia, while sharing China's opposition to UN sanctions on Iran, has moved closer to the West's view on referral.
An Iranian source in Vienna said Iran had written to the EU trio proposing that talks restart immediately and saying Tehran was ready to "remove existing ambiguities regarding its peaceful nuclear programme through talks and negotiations".
The senior British official dismissed the offer, saying: "That is vacuous because the Iranians have created the conditions to make (further talks) impossible." Despite Tehran's call for talks, an Iranian official said the decision to resume nuclear fuel research was "irreversible".
Ali Asghar Soltaniyeh, Iranian representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), also told the students news agency ISNA that he would meet the agency's chief Mohamed ElBaradei later yesterday to discuss Iran's plans.
An IAEA spokesman could not confirm a meeting was planned. Mr Soltaniyeh reiterated Iran's threat to halt snap IAEA checks on its nuclear sites if its case goes to the Security Council.
The senior British official said referral to the Council would not automatically lead to punitive measures.
"We don't see this leading straight into sanctions," the official told reporters under condition he not be named. "We want to build gradual, sustained pressure over time."
Mr Lavrov also said talk of sanctions was premature. "The question of sanctions against Iran puts the cart before the horse. Sanctions are in no way the best, or the only, way to solve the problem," he told a news briefing.
A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman said Beijing favoured diplomacy, urging all parties to "keep patient and make utmost efforts to resume the negotiations between the EU3 and Iran".