Text Only
Search

UN Urges Iran To Increase Nuclear Transparency, But Tehran Remains Defiant


28 April 2006
Heinlein report - Download 421k - Download (Real) audio clip
Heinlein report - Download 421k - Listen (Real) audio clip

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) says Iran is continuing its nuclear fuel enrichment in defiance of the U.N Security Council. The United States and European members of the Council are urgently preparing a legally binding resolution demanding a halt to the enrichment program.

Mohamed ElBaradei
Mohamed ElBaradei
The agency has concluded that Iran has successfully enriched uranium, and is ignoring international calls to stop it. That is the main finding of an eight-page report sent to the Security Council Friday by IAEA Director Mohamed ElBaradei.

The report says more than three years of studying Iran's nuclear program have failed to determine whether it is aimed at producing weapons, and called on Tehran to be more cooperative.

American and European members of the Security Council seized on the report to push their case for an immediate and unified diplomatic response, while China and Russia urged caution.

America's U.N. Ambassador John Bolton said the findings make clear that Iran has failed to comply with previous Security Council or IAEA demands.  He said the report strengthens the case made by the United States and European powers for prompt Council action on a legally binding resolution under Chapter Seven of the U.N. Charter.

John Bolton, United States Ambassador to the UN, looks on at a Security Council Meeting
John Bolton, United States Ambassador to the UN, looks on at a Security Council Meeting
"It's clear Iran has done nothing to comply with existing IAEA board resolutions or the request contained in the Security Council presidential statement that it suspend all enrichment activities and take a number of additional steps to show that in fact Iran's nuclear program is for purely civil peaceful purposes as they contend," he said.

Bolton said a draft resolution to be put forward by Council members Britain and France next week would be, "very simple, very straightforward".

"It will simply make mandatory the obligations already imposed on Iran by previously existing IAEA resolutions," he added.  "That really puts the ball back in Iran's court. It's up to them whether they will honor their obligations under the UN charter."

But Chinese and Russian diplomats signaled a long and contentious struggle ahead among the Security Council's five permanent members. Beijing's Ambassador Wang Guangya said a legally binding Chapter Seven resolution would unnecessarily complicate efforts to find a diplomatic solution.

"Chapter Seven's implication is clear," said Mr. Wang.  "All we want is a diplomatic solution. So I believe that by invoking Chapter Seven that would be more complicated, because the implications will lead events to a direction that is uncertain."

Iran has consistently maintained its position that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes.

The official Iranian news agency quotes President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad as saying he "does not give a damn" about Security Council resolutions, and would not back down one bit in its quest for nuclear technology. He called Iran's uranium enrichment program "irreversible."

U.N. diplomats say the Security Council strategy on Iran is likely to take shape next Tuesday, when top diplomats of the Permanent Five Council members and Germany meet in Paris. Another meeting is possible the following week when the diplomats gather again in New York for talks on the Middle East.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Bush Says World 'United' in Concerns Over Iran
US Report Calls Iran "Most Active" State Sponsor of Terrorism
Experts Urge Direct US-Iranian Talks to Resolve Nuclear Issue
 
  Top Story
US House Approves Health Care Reform Measure

  More Stories
Iran Lawmakers Say Tehran Will Reject UN-Backed Nuclear Deal
G20: Financial Stimulus Still Needed to Stabilize Economic Recovery
Afghanistan: NATO Strike Kills 7 Afghan Security Members  Audio Clip Available
Israelis Rally for Peace on Rabin Anniversary
Obama Praises Those Who Ended Fort Hood Rampage
Afghanistan Rejects UN Criticism of Karzai
Navy Ship Honoring 9/11 Victims is Commissioned Into Fleet
China's Wen Promises Greater Cooperation With Arab Nations  Audio Clip Available
Pakistan Army: 12 Militants Killed in Recent Fighting
Iraqi Parliament Fails Again to Approve New Electoral Law
Medvedev: Not All Hopes Realized After Berlin Wall Fell
US Disappointed at Breakdown in Honduras Political Talks
Berlin Prepares for Celebrations 20 Years After Fall of Wall  Video clip available
Harnessing Waste Produces Gas for Cooking in Kenya  Video clip available