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German industry leery of Iran trade crackdown: report
by Staff Writers
Berlin (AFP) Dec 15, 2009


Gulf Arab states oppose military action against Iran
Kuwait City (AFP) Dec 15, 2009 - Arab states in the Gulf are opposed to any military action against neighbouring Muslim Iran over its nuclear programme, Kuwait's Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammad al-Sabah said Tuesday. "We do not accept any military action against Iran," Sheikh Mohammad said at the end of a summit of the Gulf Cooperation Council. "Any tension in the region will reflect on our situation. We have many problems already and we do not want any more," the minister, whose country chairs the GCC, told a news conference. "We urge Iran to comply with what is required from it by the International Atomic Energy Agency and deal positively with international legal resolutions." The final communique of the Gulf summit said its leaders welcome "international efforts to resolve the Iranian nuclear programme crisis through peaceful means." The West accuses Iran of working to manufacture a nuclear bomb but Tehran has repeatedly denied the allegations, saying its nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes.

German banks and companies are uneasy about proposals by an international anti-corruption body to require financial institutions to do more to curb exports to Iran, a newspaper reported Tuesday.

The calls by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), an inter-governmental body to counter illicit financial transactions that could be used to promote terrorism, could be adopted in February as part of a new round of sanctions against Iran over its nuclear programme, the daily Handelsblatt reported.

The Association of German Banks (BdB), grouping private financial institutions, warned against the potential consequences of the FATF proposals put forward in November.

"If the cost is too high, we run the risk ultimately of seeing banks withdraw from doing business with certain countries or in certain sectors," Bernd Brabaender of the BdB told Handelsblatt.

German industry has also raised objections to FATF proposals requiring banks to demand that companies that do business with Iran assure that their activities are "above reproach" before offering them financing.

But Oliver Wieck of the Federation of German Industry said that Germany already had effective checks on exports and argued that FATF regulations would undermine them.

According to federal statistics, German exports to Iran reached 291.4 million euros (426.4 million dollars) in September, with imports totalling 97.0 million euros.

The FATF task force secretariat is based at the Paris headquarters of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.

Many in the West suspect Iran seeks to build a nuclear bomb, an allegation Tehran denies.

European Union leaders and the United States this month backed new sanctions against Iran, warning that Tehran's refusal to negotiate over its nuclear programme must be met with a tough response.

Iran is already working under three sets of UN sanctions for refusing to stop uranium enrichment, a process to make both nuclear fuel and the fissile material needed for an atomic bomb.

earlier related report
US pushes for 'additional pressure' on Iran
Washington (AFP) Dec 14, 2009 - The administration of President Barack Obama pushed Monday for tougher sanctions on Iran to curb its nuclear ambitions after driving home the point that its near year-long diplomatic engagement with Tehran had yielded little.

However, it was not clear if the administration can yet rally the support it needs for a fourth round of UN sanctions when it said China is unable to join the United States, Russia, Britain, France and Germany in Brussels on Friday.

Both Russia and China, which a US official said had a scheduling problem barring it from attending the six-power meeting, have been more reluctant than the other four powers about tightening sanctions.

The group is known as the P5-plus-1, or the permanent five veto-wielding members of the UN Security Council, plus Germany.

With a year-end deadline, the administration signaled Friday that time is running out for Iran to seize its offer of diplomatic engagement for resolving nuclear and other issues.

Following up on pessimistic comments she made last week, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Obama's engagement policy had yielded few, if any results.

"We have reached out. We have offered the opportunity to engage in meaningful, serious discussions with our Iranian counterparts. We have joined fully in the P5-plus-1 one process. We've been at the table," Clinton said.

"But I don't think anyone can doubt that our outreach has produced very little in terms of any kind of positive response from the Iranians," the chief US diplomat said.

If engagement fails under what is called a dual-track strategy, the United States will try to rally the international community to press Iran into changing course on its nuclear program, she recalled.

"And certainly additional pressure is going to be called for in order to do that," she said Monday during a press briefing with Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel Moratinos.

In an interview Friday with Al-Jazeera English channel, Clinton said the world community will now turn toward using "more pressure, like sanctions" against Iran to halt its nuclear program.

Clinton said Iran has taken actions that show little sign it will respond to Obama's efforts to engage them as it has failed to build confidence in recent months, including since an October 1 meeting with the P5-plus-1 in Geneva.

For example, she said Iran has balked at a US-backed International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) proposal to ship abroad low-grade nuclear fuel so it can be further enriched and returned to refuel a Tehran medical research reactor.

Also undermining international confidence, she said, is Iran's continued crackdown on peaceful opposition to Iran's disputed election in June that gave incumbent Mahmoud Ahmadinejad another term in office.

She said Iran also fanned fears about its intentions when it failed to come clean on a secret uranium enrichment plant near the holy city of Qom, and noted that Iran has subsequently announced plans for 10 to 20 new nuclear plants.

State Department spokesman Ian Kelly told reporters that a P5-plus-1 meeting "won't be possible this year" because of a scheduling difficulty, raising questions about how soon the six could agree on concerted action.

A State Department official later confirmed it was China that "couldn't come on December 18" for a political directors meeting in Brussels.

But the official also said plans were afoot for a P5-plus-1 teleconference call on Iran, probably by next week.

The US Congress sent Obama on Sunday a giant spending bill that also requires periodic reports on the status of diplomatic efforts to freeze Iran's nuclear program as well as on US and global sanctions on the Islamic republic.

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Iran is working towards testing a key final component of a nuclear bomb, British newspaper The Times said Monday, citing confidential documents. The daily said it had obtained notes describing a four-year plan to test a neutron initiator, the component of a nuclear bomb which triggers an explosion. The Times claimed that foreign intelligence agencies dated the documents to early 2007 ... read more


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