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NUKEWARS
Rouhani says Iran bears no hostility to the world
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) April 18, 2014


Iran slashes highly-enriched nuclear stock: UN watchdog
Vienna, Austria (AFP) April 17, 2014 - Iran has cut its stock of highly-enriched uranium by 75 percent, a new report by the UN's nuclear watchdog revealed Thursday.

The monthly update by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), seen by AFP, showed Tehran remained in compliance with a November interim deal made with world powers, drawn up as part of efforts to find a lasting solution to Iran's controversial nuclear drive.

Under the agreement, Iran pledged to "dilute" half of its highly-enriched uranium by mid-April, with the rest to be converted by mid-July.

The IAEA report also said that progress on a plant in Tehran that will be used for the conversion of low-enriched uranium had been delayed, but that Iran had said this will not prevent it from fulfilling its part of the deal by the July 20 deadline.

Diplomats who saw the document told AFP everything was in order.

The international community was "keeping an eye" on progress at the conversion plant in Tehran, one of the diplomats added.

Under the November deal, Iran agreed to freeze parts of its nuclear activities, including limiting enrichment. Enriching uranium can be part of a peaceful atomic drive but can also produce weapons-grade material for a bomb.

Tehran has consistently said its nuclear programme is for civilian purposes only, while the West believes it has a military dimension.

Iran and six world powers -- the US, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany -- will next meet on May 13 in a bid to draw up a lasting accord and end the decade-old standoff over Iran's nuclear programme.

Iran has no intention of committing acts of aggression but retains the right to defend itself militarily, President Hassan Rouhani said Friday.

Speaking at a parade to mark Army Day, Rouhani delivered a peaceful message that referenced negotiations with leading powers aimed at securing a permanent deal to resolve a decade-long impasse over Tehran's nuclear programme.

"The neighbours should know that the Iranian military wants stability in the region," he said.

"During the nuclear talks we told the world we do not want to attack anyone and we do not want war."

Although the speech was preceded by fighter jets passing overhead, and followed by a procession of missiles and other military hardware on trucks, Rouhani's tone contrasted sharply with the often bellicose rhetoric of his predecessor Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who routinely took aim at Israel.

"We are people of reason and dialogue," Rouhani said.

"Over the past two centuries Iran has never attacked anyone, but we have always confronted aggressors."

Since coming to power last August, Rouhani, seen as a moderate determined to revive Iran's sanctions-ravaged economy, has presided over a delicate thaw in relations with the West.

Under a preliminary deal signed last November, Iran agreed to freeze some nuclear activities for six months, which led to modest sanctions relief and a promise from Western states of no new restrictions on its hard-hit economy.

Iran's talks with the P5 +1 powers -- the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany -- will resume on May 13, with leaders seeking a lasting accord to end a long-running international standoff over the country's nuclear activities.

Iran has always denied allegations by Western nations and Israel that it is secretly pursuing a nuclear weapons capability alongside its civilian programme.

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NUKEWARS
Israel minister warns Kerry over 'surrender' to Iran
Jerusalem (AFP) April 14, 2014
Israel's intelligence minister Monday slammed as unacceptable comments by US Secretary of State John Kerry on negotiations with Iran over its nuclear programme which he said indicated a "surrender" to Tehran. "The things Kerry said in the Congress are worrying, they are surprising and they are unacceptable," Yuval Steinitz, who is also strategic affairs minister, told public radio. "We w ... read more


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