Iran Threatens To Stop Nuke Inspection Cooperation
As anti-US nuke inspector Mohammed ElBaradei ( with regards to Iran’s nuke program he has already said that “Even the idea of people talking about using force … it would be catastrophic, it would be an act of madness, and it would not solve the issue,”, so we know he has a motivation to phony up his reports to prevent any attacks ) prepares his new report, along comes this…
(AP)A senior Iranian envoy warned the United States and its allies on Wednesday against pushing for new U.N. Security Council sanctions on his country, suggesting Tehran could retaliate by ending cooperation with U.N. experts probing its nuclear program.
U.S. and European diplomats in turn criticized Tehran for not doing enough to ease international concerns and said its recent willingness to allow a partial probe of its past nuclear activities was not enough to banish fears it wanted to make the atomic bomb.
The officials spoke to The Associated Press as International Atomic Energy Agency chief Mohamed ElBaradei put the finishing touches on his latest Iran report.
The restricted document—a snapshot of Iranian nuclear developments over the past three months—would be made available to the IAEA’s 35- nation board on Thursday, diplomats said. It will serve as the key signpost at a Sept. 10 board meeting that will focus both on Iran’s lessened stonewalling of IAEA investigators and its continued refusal to suspend uranium enrichment and heed other Security Council demands.
Speaking on the eve of the report’s release, diplomats familiar with its contents told the AP that much of it would reiterate the findings contained in a joint Iranian-IAEA memorandum published Monday on the agency’s web site that summarized the extent of Tehran’s cooperation with the agency’s nuclear probe.
Suggesting significant progress, that document said that the IAEA—the U.N. nuclear watchdog—considered that information provided by Iran on past small-scale plutonium experiments had “resolved” agency concerns about the issue. The memorandum also outlined a timetable for Iranian answers to other questions about programs and activities that—like the plutonium work—could be linked to a nuclear weapons program.
Staking out Tehran’s position on the report, Ali-Ashgar Soltanieh, Tehran’s chief IAEA delegate, said he expected it to reflect the “positive step taken by Iran” in cooperating over recent weeks with agency investigators. And he indirectly criticized the United States, which last week called Iranian cooperation insufficient to stave off a third round of U.N. sanctions over its refusal to freeze uranium enrichment and other activities that could be used to make nuclear arms.
“Any action by the U.N. Security Council will deteriorate the situation,” he told the AP. “Therefore it is highly expected that this positive development will not be put in jeopardy by any immature and unjustified measures.”
But EU diplomats and a U.S. official disagreed, reflecting their countries’ contention that Tehran needed to do much more to avert the threat of new sanctions.
Reflecting their unhappiness with the memorandum—which they considered too favorable toward Iran—senior representatives of the U.S., Britain, France and Germany on Wednesday called on ElBaradei and urged him to introduce more critical language in his Thursday report, said other diplomats. They—like their colleagues—demanded anonymity for discussing confidential matters.
In particular, the representatives questioned the assertion that the issue of Iran’s plutonium experiments—and fears that some of the fissile material had gone missing—had been resolved, urging the agency to reopen the issue by demanding new samples from the Iranians, they said.
“The word ‘resolved’ is actually troublesome,” said a U.S. official. “It hasn’t been resolved as far as we’re concerned.”
And an EU diplomat accredited to the Vienna-based agency said his country had “serious concerns” that the timetable, which pushes discussions of some issues into November, “seems to deliberately string out the issues as long as possible.”
Beyond that, the main concern—suspension of uranium enrichment—is ignored in the memorandum, said the diplomat.
Well then, I say we allow Iran to inspect our nukes up close and might personal then …
August 29th, 2007 at 5:33 pm“Serious concerns” WTF does that mean. What is the EU going to do about? Another slap on the wrist? Or just more words.
What Iran needs is a JADAM enema right up Ahmedinajacket’s ass. Crush their nuclear program. Beat the shit out of Al Quds. Then maybe they’ll get the point…
Say it with me class: 1 Away…2 away…..
Tehran+Syria=Dresden=peace in the mideast
August 29th, 2007 at 5:38 pmIt’s very obvious that El Baradei is doing everything he can to prevent anyone from ending Iran’s nuclear dreams. His role in this is as troublesome as it was in Iraq before 2003, which suggests that the IAEA is as anti-west, pro-Arab/Muslim as the UN. Ewwwww! Not a recipe for a peaceful end to this fiasco.
August 29th, 2007 at 6:09 pmMy worry is that if those reactors aren’t blown off the map soon, it is going to be too late. A nuclear Iran is just not an option.
Is this what they call “cooperation”?
August 29th, 2007 at 10:44 pmThey’re muslims, they’re talking, they’re lying, vaporize their program.
August 30th, 2007 at 2:19 am