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NUKEWARS
World powers, Iran at odds in crunch nuclear talks
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) May 23, 2012


Russia says Iran ready for 'concrete action'
Moscow (AFP) May 23, 2012 - Russia said on Wednesday that Iran was ready to hold serious talks on its nuclear programme that could lead to a gradual lifting of sanctions in exchange for broader transparency from Tehran.

"We have a clear understanding... that Iran is ready to agree on concrete actions," Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told reporters, without elaborating.

Lavrov spoke as world powers were due to hold talks with Iranian officials in Baghdad aimed at reaching a breakthrough in the long-running nuclear crisis.

Russia has urged future talks to be based on a formula under which nations gradually lift four sets of UN Security Council sanctions on Iran once it begins meeting specific concerns.

Lavrov said this process should last "until we reach the stage where it becomes clear to everyone that Iran's nuclear programme does not have a military dimension".

He also urged US President Barack Obama not to sign into law new sanctions against Iran approved by US Senate on Monday.

Iran says insufficient common ground in nuclear talks
Baghdad (AFP) May 23, 2012 - World powers and Iran have "not yet sufficient" grounds for an accord permitting another round of talks after the current round in Baghdad, an Iranian official said late on Wednesday as negotiations looked set to enter a second day.

"The points of agreement are not yet sufficient for another round," the official said on condition of anonymity, adding that the world powers had to "revise" a package of proposals made earlier on Wednesday.

"We believe that the two parties must agree on common points to merit a new round of negotiations. The necessary foundation needs to be built. Common points must be agreed in Baghdad."

The official added, however, that "the Western parties want to continue these negotiations at any cost. This is not our position."

Wednesday's talks in Baghdad are the second round in the latest series between the P5+1 group of world powers and Iran over the Islamic Republic's controversial nuclear programme, with earlier negotiations held in Istanbul last month.

Iran insists its nuclear programme is peaceful, but much of the international community suspects it is masking attempts to join the elite club of nations with nuclear weapons.

Earlier EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton presented a package of new incentives on behalf of the P5+1 -- Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States, plus Germany.

Iranian state media ran reports slamming the P5+1 package, with the IRNA news agency calling it "outdated, not comprehensive, and unbalanced."

Ashton's spokesman gave no details on what the incentives included but reports said they fell short of meeting Iran's key demand for an easing of the sanctions piled on the country in recent years -- more are due on July 1.

Iran demanded late Wednesday that world powers sweeten proposals made in talks in Baghdad aimed at easing the crisis over Tehran's nuclear programme, saying future negotiations were at stake.

"The points of agreement are not yet sufficient for another round," an Iranian official said on condition of anonymity and Western officials confirmed the talks would resume at 0500 GMT on Thursday for a second, unscheduled day.

Earlier Wednesday, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton presented a new package of proposals on behalf of the P5+1 -- Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States, plus Germany.

The EU gave no details but they were believed to call on Iran to suspend enrichment of uranium to purities of 20 percent in return for incentives that fell short of meeting Iran's main demand of easing sanctions.

Reflecting official thinking in Tehran, state media ran reports slamming the package, with the IRNA news agency calling it "outdated, not comprehensive, and unbalanced."

Iran made a five-step counter-proposal that an official said was "based on the principles of step-by-step and reciprocity," which the ISNA news agency called "comprehensive... transparent and practical."

"We need the steps that both sides have to take to be clearly defined and there is no possibility of going back on them," the official from the Iranian delegation said.

"For example, that they lift sanctions that they cannot then readopt two months later under a different pretext."

US State Department spokeswoman Victria Nuland told reporters in Washington that the P5+1 package would include "step-by-step reciprocal steps aimed at near-term action on our part if Iran takes its own steps."

Sweeteners reportedly offered included a pledge not to impose any new sanctions, as well easing Iranian access to aircraft parts and a possible suspension of an EU insurance ban on ships carrying Iranian oil.

It also reportedly included a revival of previous attempts to get Iran to ship abroad its stockpiles of enriched uranium in return for fuel for a reactor producing medical isotopes.

Iran says that a lack of fuel plates for this reactor was the reason it started in 2010 to enrich uranium to purities of 20 percent, a capability that reduces the theoretical "breakout" time needed to reach a weapons-grade 90 percent.

Iran announced on Tuesday that it was loading domestically produced, 20-percent enriched uranium fuel into the reactor, and the Iranian official in Baghdad was dismissive.

"A possible swap of uranium enriched by Iran for fuel isn't very interesting for us because we are already producing our own fuel," the Iranian official said.

US President Barack Obama took office in January 2009 offering a radical change in approach to his predecessor, George W. Bush, in dealings with Iran, famously offering an "extended hand" to Tehran if it "unclenched its fist."

This failed, however, and Iran has since dramatically expanded its programme, including by starting in 2010 to enrich uranium to 20 percent and from January in the Fordo site deep inside a mountain near the shrine city of Qom.

Israel, Washington's closest ally in the region, feels its very existence would be under threat if its arch foe gets the bomb and has refused to rule out a pre-emptive strike on Iran's nuclear facilities.

Iran and the major powers returned to talks in Istanbul in mid-April after a 15-month hiatus, finding enough common ground to agree to meet again in Baghdad, hailing what they said was a fresh attitude.

But the Baghdad talks were always going to be tough, as to make progress the two sides would have to tackle some of the thorny issues that have divided them -- and the P5+1 themselves -- for years.

Diplomats and analysts said that a satisfactory outcome would be an agreement to hold more regular talks at working level to thrash out a series of confidence-building measures in what would be a lengthy process.

One key way for Iran to win the confidence of the P5+1 would be to implement the additional protocol of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which allows for more intrusive inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency.

The IAEA also wants Iran to address allegations made in its November report that until 2003, and possibly since, Tehran had a "structured programme" of "activities relevant to the development of a nuclear explosive device."

IAEA chief Yukiya Amano said on Tuesday after talks in Tehran that a deal on ways to go over these accusations with the Iranians would be signed "quite soon." Western reaction though was cool.

"This is the second meeting. Istanbul kicked off the process of discussions. Now we're getting on to the real substance of the matter," Ashton's spokesman Michael Mann said Wednesday.

"We are keen to get a move on but these things can't be solved overnight."

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NUKEWARS
Israel 'highly sceptical' of IAEA deal with Iran
Jerusalem (AFP) May 22, 2012
Israeli officials on Tuesday sought to pour cold water on hopes of an emerging deal between the International Atomic Energy Agency and Iran to try and solve the dispute over Tehran's nuclear drive. "We are highly sceptical about this apparent agreement between the IAEA and Iran," a senior official told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity. Earlier on Tuesday, IAEA chief Yukiya Amano ... read more


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