Friday, October 13, 2006

EU: IRANIAN NUCLEAR ISSUE TO BE HANDED OVER TO THE UN

EU to hand Iran nuclear issue to UN

brussels • EU nations are set to announce next week that talks with Iran over its nuclear programme have failed and leave it up to the UN Security Council to consider punitive action, official sources said yesterday.

According to draft conclusions of an European foreign ministers meeting next Tuesday, EU nations now believe that "Iran's continuation of enrichment-related activities has left the EU no choice," but to throw the issue back to the UN.

The ministers' conclusions on Iran, drawn up by the European Union's 25 member nations, express "deep concern" that Iran has not yet suspended its enrichment-related and reprocessing activities as required by the IAEA, the UN nuclear watchdog and a Security Council resolution.

In Berlin, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier on Friday said the path was clear for the UN Security Council to intervene in the standoff over Iran's nuclear programme.

Steinmeier said the European Union had to accept "that we will not get to the negotiating table" after EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana said last week that talks with Iran had broken down.
The French foreign ministry said yesterday a "broad agreement" existed between the six world powers engaged in the Iran issue, the Security Council five plus Germany, about UN measures over Iran's nuclear programme.


"This means that there is no argument against letting the Security Council deal with the matter," a spokesman for the ministry told reporters in Paris. "It's clear that we are now going to work in New York (UN) very soon," said ministry spokesman Jean-Baptiste Mattei.
However, the door to talks remains open, he added. "To double-lock the door to negotiations is not our vision of things."


A European diplomat went further, saying that the EU foreign ministers will formally end negotiations with Tehran over Iran's nuclear ambitions at their talks in Luxembourg.
The ministers are due to declare that "negotiations with Iran have terminated because of a lack of results," the diplomat said on condition of anonymity.


However, the draft of the meeting's conclusions dating from October 11 and seen by AFP does not include that sentence. Senior diplomats from the six-Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States-discussed the sanctions during a videoconference Wednesday morning, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said.

"I think there is broad agreement on the potential sanctions that would be included, but not yet agreement on the specific items that would be in a resolution, that has to be worked out," he said. The six have been debating for weeks over the kinds of sanctions to slap on Iran for ignoring an August 31 UN deadline to suspend a uranium enrichment programme that Washington and others fear will be subverted to produce fissile material for nuclear weapons.



Pertinent Links:

1) EU to hand Iran nuclear issue to UN

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