U.S. and Europe Draft U.N. Resolution on Iran
By ELAINE SCIOLINO
05/02/06 "New
York Times" -- -- — The United States, Britain and
France have drafted a binding Security Council resolution
requiring Iran to stop key nuclear activities, but Russia and
China are already resisting, officials involved in the
negotiations said today.
The Americans and the Europeans want to move swiftly against
Iran, and to that end, the resolution will be introduced in New
York on Wednesday or Thursday, according to R. Nicolas Burns,
the under secretary of state who has led American diplomatic
efforts concerning Iran.
"The Security Council has no option now but to proceed under
Chapter 7," Mr. Burns told reporters in Paris, referring to the
article in the United Nations Charter that makes resolutions
mandatory under international law and opens the way to sanctions
or even military action.
He predicted a long, drawn-out process that could take up to two
months. Mr. Burns was in Paris for preliminary talks with the
political directors of the four other nations that along with
the United States are permanent members of the Security Council
— Britain, China, France and Russia and with Germany.
The talks were designed to pave the way for a meeting of their
foreign ministers hosted in New York on May 9 by Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice. It would be part of an American and
European-led campaign to forge a common position against Iran
after it failed to comply with an informal Security Council
deadline last Friday to suspend uranium enrichment.
The draft resolution, which has not been made public, expresses
"serious concern" that Iran has not complied with its
international commitments and calls on it to stop producing
enriched uranium, which can have both peaceful and military
uses, and return to the negotiating table, according to
officials involved in drafting in.
In its current form, the resolution does not include a fixed
deadline for compliance or a specific threat of action against
Iran if it does not comply, the officials said.
Iran, which maintains that its nuclear program is peaceful, has
remained steadfast in its position that it will never give up
its right to enrich uranium, and in the past month has instead
accelerated that program.
In Tehran, Iran's Foreign Minister Manuchehr Mottaki expressed
confidence today that both Russia and China, two of Iran's most
important trading powers, will veto any Security Council
resolution that imposes economic sanctions against Iran.
"There is a very wrong assumption held by some that the West can
do anything it wants through the Security Council," Mr. Mottaki
told the hardline Tehran daily Kayhan.
But Mr. Burns stressed that sanctions would only come later. He
said that oil and gas sanctions were not under discussion, but
predicted in "a month or two or three" there would be
international support for sanctions. He mentioned technology
imports with civilian and military uses, a travel ban on Iranian
officials and a ban on all arms sales as likely targets.
Also in Iran today, Gholam Reza Aghazadeh, the director of the
country's Atomic Energy Organization, announced that Iran had
succeeded in enriching uranium to 4.8 percent, a higher level of
purity than it had previously stated. He added that Iran would
not enrich further, because, he said, "this level suffices for
making nuclear fuel." In its report last Friday, the
International Atomic Energy Agency said that samples taken
inside Iran tend to confirm the enrichment level of 3.6 percent
declared by Iran as the level needed to make electricity.
Although Mr. Aghazadeh's claim can be seen as provocative, it is
within the bounds of what is used in light water reactors, which
is generally considered less than 5 percent enrichment. Uranium
must be about 90 percent pure for use in bomb-making.
In recent weeks, Iran has responded to threats of punitive
measures against it with threats of its own. Today, Gen.
Mohammad Ebrahim Dehghani, a senior commander of the
Revolutionary Guards, added his voice, and was quoted by the
ISNA news agency as saying that if the United States attacked
Iran militarily, "the first place we target will be Israel."
The Americans, together with the French and the Europeans, are
convinced that isolation of Iran by the international community
is the only way to stop it from moving forward with what
Washington is convinced is a plan to make nuclear weapons.
The Russians and Chinese, by contrast, argue that the American
and European initiative to punish Iran in the Security Council
lacks a strategic goal and will only escalate the crisis with
Iran.
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, for example, has publicly warned
that sanctions would prove counterproductive.
In Ottawa on Monday, Mr. Lavrov once again floated a Russian
proposal to enrich uranium for use by Iran inside Russia. "The
joint venture will guarantee that all the needs of Iran's
peaceful nuclear sector will be met," Mr. Lavrov was quoted as
saying by the Russian news agency Interfax.
Iran's president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has publicly rejected the
Russian proposal, although other Iranian officials insist the
plan is still being considered.
Iran will be at the top of the agenda when German Chancellor
Angela Merkel meets with President George Bush in Washington on
Wednesday.
Ms. Merkel is expected to raise with the Bush administration the
Russian plan to enrich uranium for Iran in Russia and ship it
back to Iran, German officials said.
And although Ms. Merkel takes a line similar to that of her
American and other European counterparts, some of her senior
advisors have called for more flexibility.
The German defense minister, Franz Josef Jung, for example, said
in a recent interview that it would be difficult to achieve a
diplomatic breakthrough with Iran unless there were direct talks
between Washington and Tehran.
"This is also our request to Washington: that it begins direct
talks and from there reach results," Mr. Jung said. Germanys
foreign minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, urged Washington to
begin direct talks with Iran during his visit to the United
States last month.
But in his remarks to reporters on Tuesday, Mr. Burns ruled out
such an approach, stressing that isolation, not engagement, was
the only acceptable approach.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company
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