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Condoleezza Rice
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6 world powers agree on Iran incentives

US, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China agree to offer Iran new choice of rewards if it gives up suspected nuclear activities or punishment if it refuses; Russian foreign minister: Offer to Iran worked excludes use of military force

The US and five other world powers have an offer they say Iran can't refuse — if it knows what's best for it.

 

The six nations on Thursday came up with incentives they hope will persuade Tehran to stop suspect nuclear activities, but made it clear that Iran risks UN sanctions if it rejects the package.

  

"There are two paths ahead," British Foreign Secretary Margaret Becket said in announcing the proposals put together by the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China.

 

The package would be on the table for a proposed new round of bargaining with Tehran over what the West calls a rogue nuclear program that could produce a bomb. The US, in a major policy shift, agreed this week to join those talks under certain conditions. It would be the first major public negotiations between the adversaries in more than a quarter century.

 

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice met with the foreign ministers from the European nations that led talks with Iran that stalled last year. Also present were representatives of Russia and China, which have been Tehran's trading partners and might join in any future talks with Iran.

 

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Friday that the offer to Iran worked out in Vienna excludes the use of military force.

 

"I can say unambiguously that all the agreements from yesterday's meetings rule out in any circumstances the use of military force," Lavrov was quoted by RIA news agency as saying on his return to Moscow from Vienna.

 

Since Russia and China hold vetoes in the UN Security Council, the US needs their cooperation to seek sanctions or other harsh measures by that body.

 

"We are very satisfied by the results of today's meetings here in Vienna," US Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns told reporters. "We consider them a step forward in our quest to deny Iran nuclear weapons capability."

 

A short statement issued by foreign ministers from the six powers and the European Union did not mention economic sanctions — the punishment or deterrent favored by the United States and that Iran has tried hard to avoid.

 

The powers agreed privately, however, that Iran could face tough UN Security Council sanctions if it fails to give up the enrichment of uranium and other disputed nuclear activities, US officials said.

 

Diplomats feared Iran would immediately reject any invitation to bargain if the threat of sanctions was explicit, officials involved in the discussions said on condition of anonymity because the seven-party negotiations were private.

 

The foreign ministers' statement threatens unspecified "further steps" in the Security Council.

 

The group's statement also contained no details of the incentives to be offered to Iran in the coming days. Diplomats previously have said the package includes help developing legitimate nuclear power plants and various economic benefits.

 

"We are prepared to resume negotiations should Iran resume suspension of all enrichment-related and reprocessing activities," as previously required by the UN nuclear watchdog agency, Beckett said.

 

If Iran returned to the talks stalled since last year, "we would also suspend action in the Security Council," Beckett said.

 

'Positive response'

 

The Security Council, which can levy mandatory global sanctions and back its mandates with military force, has been reviewing Iran's case for two months. Its permanent, veto-holding members have been at odds over the possibility of sanctions, with Russia and China opposed.

 

Iran's foreign minister welcomed the idea of direct talks, but rebuffed the U.S. condition that Tehran must put uranium enrichment on hold before talks can begin. Iran insists its nuclear work is peaceful and aimed at developing a new energy source.

 

"Iran welcomes dialogue under just conditions but won't give up our rights," the state-run Iranian television quoted Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki as saying Thursday.

  

At the White House, President Bush warned that the confrontation would end up at the UN Security Council if Iran continues to enrich uranium.

 

"If they continue their obstinance, if they continue to say to the world, 'we really don't care what your opinion is,' then the world is going to act in concert," Bush said.

 

Bush said he got a "positive response" in a telephone conversation Tuesday with Russian President Vladimir Putin, adding, "We expect Russia to participate in the United Nations Security Council. We'll see whether or not they agree to do that."

 

Bush also spoke about Iran on Thursday with Chinese President Hu Jintao. He revealed little about that conversation, saying, "they understood our strategy."

 

The shift in US tactics was meant to offer the Iranians a last chance to avoid punishing sanctions, and to let the United States assert that it was willing to exhaust every opportunity to resolve the Iranian impasse without force.

 

Previous talks among Iran, Britain, France and Germany foundered last year. European diplomats and others said the United States was partly at fault, arguing that it alone carries the global weight to force Iran to bargain in good faith and to make any agreement stick.

 

The US offer for talks is conditioned on Iran suspending its enrichment of uranium and related activities and allowing inspections to prove it. Uranium enrichment can make fuel for nuclear power reactors or the fissile core of warheads.

 

European nations and the Security Council have demanded the same thing, but Iran has refused to comply.

 

Reuters contributed to the report

 


פרסום ראשון: 06.01.06, 22:33
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