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NUKEWARS
Iran sets 'red lines' ahead of fresh nuclear talks
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) Feb 10, 2014


Rouhani says Iran 'serious' about talks on final nuclear deal
Tehran (AFP) Feb 10, 2014 - President Hassan Rouhani said Monday Iran is "serious" about negotiations on a comprehensive deal with world powers over its controversial nuclear drive, a week before fresh talks in Vienna.

"Iran is ready to enter negotiations with the P5+1 (group of world powers) to reach a comprehensive and final agreement," Rouhani told Tehran-based foreign diplomats in remarks broadcast live on state television.

"We are serious in this regard, as we were serious in the first step," he said referring to three rounds of intensive negotiations last year that culminated in a landmark, interim deal on November 24.

Under the accord, Iran agreed to temporarily cap parts of its nuclear activities amid suspicions in the West and Israel that its work masks military objectives despite its repeated denials.

In exchange, it received modest relief from crippling international sanctions as well as a promise by Western powers that new sanctions would not be imposed against it during the six-month duration of the interim deal, which came into effect on January 20.

In the next round of talks, Iran and the P5+1 group -- the United States, Britain, France, China and Russia plus Germany -- are to strive for a comprehensive accord that would once and for all solve the decade-long standoff over Iran's nuclear drive.

Iranian negotiators and counterparts from the P5+1 will resume the talks in Vienna on February 18 in a process that is expected to last months.

Rouhani's remarks came a day after Iran and the UN nuclear watchdog struck a seven-step deal in separate but parallel negotiations that seek to enhance transparency over Tehran's nuclear work.

That deal included a promise by Iran to clarify its use of detonators as part of a probe into long-standing allegations that its past nuclear work, mostly before 2003, had "possible military dimensions".

Iran says new centrifuge developed to enrich uranium
Tehran (AFP) Feb 10, 2014 - Iran has developed a new generation of centrifuges which are 15 times more powerful than those currently being used to enrich uranium, its atomic chief Ali Akbar Salehi said Monday.

"We unveiled a new generation of centrifuges that surprised the Westerners ... This new machine is 15 times more powerful than the previous generation," he said, quoted by the state broadcaster on its website, iribnews.ir.

He said the development was not in violation of a November 24 agreement between Iran and six world powers that has imposed curbs on Tehran's nuclear drive.

"We successfully argued that this was allowed within the research and development article in the agreement," Salehi added.

Iran currently has nearly 19,000 centrifuges, including 10,000 of the so-called first generation being used to enrich uranium.

Some 1,000 second generation machines, three to five times more powerful, have been installed but are not in service.

Under the November deal, Iran cannot increase the number of its centrifuges.

Salehi did not say when the new centrifuges would become operational, but a first machine was to be delivered to a medical centre in Karaj, west of Tehran, "within two or three months."

Iran laid out "red lines" Monday related to its ballistic missile programme, atomic sites and uranium enrichment ahead of fresh nuclear talks with world powers.

President Hassan Rouhani insisted Iran was "serious" about the talks, as his negotiators warned they would not back down on some of the thorniest issues of the decade-long dispute.

Iran's defence minister meanwhile announced the successful testing of a new ballistic missile capable of evading defensive systems and causing "great destruction."

Negotiations are to resume in Vienna on February 18 and 19 between Iran and the so-called P5+1 -- Britain, France, the United States, Russia and China plus Germany.

Building on an interim deal reached in November, negotiators hope to reach a comprehensive accord to allay international concerns Iran is seeking a nuclear weapons capability, allegations denied by Tehran.

Iran made progress in separate but parallel negotiations over the weekend with the UN nuclear watchdog by agreeing to divulge information that could shed light on allegations of possible past weapons research.

Under a deal reached in Tehran with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Iran will explain its need for sophisticated detonators that could be used to initiate a nuclear chain reaction.

But on Monday, Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi, also a senior Iranian nuclear negotiator, said "defence-related issues are a red line for Iran and that Tehran "will not allow such issues to be discussed in future talks."

The US lead negotiator in the talks, Wendy Sherman, last week told a Senate hearing Iran's ballistic missile programme would be addressed in the comprehensive deal.

On Monday, official news agency IRNA cited Defence Minister Hussein Dehgan as saying Iran had successfully tested both the ballistic missile and a laser-guided projectile on the eve of the 35th anniversary of the Islamic revolution.

The missile programme -- targeted by UN Security Council sanctions -- worries Western powers, as Iran boasts long-range missiles with a maximum range of 2,000 kilometres (1,200 miles), enough to reach Israel.

Sherman had also argued Iran does not require an unfinished heavy water reactor in Arak nor the underground Fordo uranium enrichment site for its civilian nuclear programme.

But another Iranian nuclear negotiator, Majid Takhte Ravanchi, on Monday reiterated Iran would not accept the closure of "any of its nuclear sites."

The Arak site is of international concern because Iran could extract weapons-grade plutonium from spent fuel if it builds a reprocessing facility.

Last week, Iranian nuclear chief Ali Akbar Salehi said changes could be made to Arak's design to produce less plutonium and "allay the worries."

'Lack of trust'

Salehi has said Iran would refuse to give up uranium enrichment to 20 percent, a few technical steps short of weapons-grade material.

Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final say on key state matters, "has said that Iran should not give up its right to enrich (uranium) to 20 percent," Salehi said.

Salehi also announced the development of a new type of centrifuge "15 times more powerful" than those currently being used to enrich uranium.

The November deal stipulates that Tehran stops 20 percent enrichment for six months while transforming its current stockpile into a form that is more difficult to refine.

Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, Iran's top negotiator, said Monday the talks in Vienna would be "difficult," anticipating a framework for future negotiations would be discussed.

"The biggest challenge is the lack of trust," he said.

Tehran-based analyst Mohammad Ali Shabani said the progress in talks with the IAEA may smooth negotiations with the P5+1.

"The new agreement is a good indicator that Iran is serious in its commitment to a political solution to the nuclear issue," Shabani told AFP.

The Vienna-based IAEA seeks to probe allegations Iran's nuclear work before 2003, and possibly since, had "possible military dimensions."

IAEA chief inspector Tero Varjoranta said Monday Tehran's promise to provide "information and explanations" for the development of Exploding Bridge Wire detonators was only a "first step."

These detonators can have non-nuclear applications, the IAEA said in a November 2011 report, but are mainly used in weapons research, making Iran's stated development of them a "matter of concern."

The 2011 report detailed information made available to the IAEA, much of it thought to have been provided by Western and Israeli intelligence, about "possible military dimensions" of Iran's programme.

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