U.S. Accepts Draft on Iran That Omits Use of Force
By STEVEN R. WEISMAN
05/31/06 "New
York Times" -- - WASHINGTON, May 30 — The Bush
administration, seeking to enlist Russian support for a United
Nations Security Council resolution on Iran, has agreed to
language ruling out the immediate threat of military force,
American and European officials said Tuesday.
The American agreement has improved the chances that the
Russians will go along with the resolution, European diplomats
said.
The resolution is to call on Iran to suspend various nuclear
activities that are viewed in the West as part of a clandestine
weapons program, but that Iran maintains are peaceful in nature.
President Bush called President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia,
President Jacques Chirac of France and Chancellor Angela Merkel
of Germany to press for agreement on a Security Council
resolution demanding that Iran stop enriching uranium or face
possible punitive action.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's office announced that Ms.
Rice would fly to Vienna on Wednesday for more talks on Iran
with top Russian, Chinese and European envoys. The American goal
is to get an agreement on a Security Council resolution this
week, for possible approval in June.
Also being negotiated are a package of benefits in nuclear
energy, economic activities and security to be offered Iran if
it cooperates in ending its nuclear activities. The Europeans
are to offer this package with American support, but the Bush
administration has quietly expressed misgivings about some of
its possible elements.
"I think that we could safely say at this point that we feel
like we're in good shape heading into Vienna," Sean McCormack,
the State Department spokesman, said at a department briefing.
He added that Ms. Rice's top aide on the issue, R. Nicholas
Burns, the undersecretary of state for political affairs, had
worked with his counterparts over the weekend on various
disagreements. "That list of open issues is being whittled down,
being narrowed," Mr. McCormack said.
For months the United States has demanded that pressure on Iran
must increase through passage of a Security Council resolution
under Chapter VII of the United Nations charter. This chapter
invokes the Council's power to demand compliance of member
countries on certain matters and threaten punishment if they
refuse.
Russia, fearing a replay of the run-up to the Iraq war in 2002
and 2003, has opposed any invocation of Chapter VII, on the
ground that the United States might seize upon its approval as a
justification for acting unilaterally to impose economic
penalties or use military force against Iran.
To placate the Russians, the United States has agreed to invoke
only Article 41 of Chapter VII, and not the whole chapter.
Article 41 makes no reference to the possible use of force, and
therefore offers the Russians a means to support it.
"We're splitting hairs, but it keeps the process going," said a
United Nations diplomat familiar with the negotiations, speaking
anonymously because he was not authorized to discuss the talks.
European diplomats said they were not sure whether Russia would
show up in Vienna with a commitment to vote yes or to abstain
from voting on the Security Council resolution. But two
diplomats said it appeared that Russia did not like being seen
as isolated by the United States and Europe on the matter.
In addition, they said, Mr. Putin hopes to get the issue of a
Security Council resolution resolved soon so that it does not
spill into the meetings of the Group of 8 nations in Moscow in
June and in St. Petersburg in July.
Russia is the current president of the Group of 8, a rotating
position, and is hoping for successful summit talks in St.
Petersburg with President Bush and other top world leaders.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company
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