Iran Warms
To
Freeze-For-Freeze
Plan
By Gareth
Porter
03/07/08
"ICH' -- --
WASHINGTON,
Jul 2 (IPS)
- A
senior
Iranian
official
reportedly
told members
of the
Iranian
parliament
Monday that
Iran has
agreed to
freeze its
enrichment
programme
for six
weeks and
begin
negotiations
with the
P5+1 group
of states as
early as
next week,
according to
reports of
that
decision by
the Iranian
Student News
Agency (ISNA)
and by a
Farsi-language
website in
Iran.
Remarks by
Iranian
Foreign
Minister
Manoucher
Mottaki and
a top
adviser to
Supreme
Leader
Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei
on Tuesday
also seemed
to indicate
that
decision to
accept a
"freeze-for-freeze"
proposal
from the
"Iran Six"
to begin at
least
preliminary
negotiations.
The "Iran
Six"
consists of
the
permanent
members of
the UN
Security
Council -
the United
States,
Britain,
France,
China and
Russia - and
Germany.
The apparent
Iranian
decision
comes in the
wake of an
atmosphere
of
heightened
threat of
attack on
Iran by
Israel
created by a
series of
moves by
Israeli and
US officials
in recent
days.
The head of
Iran's
Atomic
Energy
Agency,
Gholam-Reza
Aghazadeh,
told members
of the
Majlis
(parliament)
energy
committee on
Monday that
Iran had
agreed to
start the
talks,
according to
the
Farsi-language
Iranian
website
Fararou. It
said
"informed
sources" had
specified
that Iran
had accepted
a six-week
freeze on
any
expansion of
enrichment
as a
condition on
such
negotiations,
as proposed
by European
Union
foreign
affairs
chief Javier
Solana.
The "Iran
Six"
proposal
also offers
to suspend
further
progress in
advancing UN
sanctions
against
Iran. It
does not,
however,
address
sanctions
organized
outside the
UN Security
Council
framework.
ISNA
reported in
a brief item
on Monday
that an
Iranian
parliamentary
energy
committee
member, whom
it did not
name, had
declared
that Iran
"has agreed
to start
talks with
the 5+1
["Iran Six"]
countries
group". It
added that
the talks
"will begin
next week".
Although
ISNA did not
report that
the official
had said
Iran would
freeze its
nuclear
activities,
in the sense
of foregoing
any increase
in
centrifuges,
it implied
as much by
reporting
that the
"Iran Six"
proposal
delivered by
Solana on
June 14
"required
Iran to
suspend
nuclear
activities
in exchange
for a set of
economic and
security
incentives".
The news
further
quoted
unnamed
"Iranian
officials"
as saying
that "common
points of
the two
packages can
be a
launching
pad to start
talks".
The
Farsi-language
website
Fararou
identified
the member
of the
committee
who had
quoted
Aghazadeh as
informing
committee
members that
Iranian
authorities
had agreed
to negotiate
with the
"Iran Six"
group as
Seyed Admad
Hosseini. It
was Hosseini
who was
quoted as
telling
reporters
that the
talks should
start next
week.
Fararou also
provided
additional
details on
Aghazadeh's
briefing. It
said the
secretary of
the Majlis
energy
committee,
Moayyed
Hosseini,
told its
reporter
that
Aghazadeh
had pointed
to "positive
aspects" of
the
negotiations
with the
"Iran Six",
"including
the fact
that the
West was
accepting
Iran's
possession
of 3,000
centrifuges".
That comment
suggested
that Tehran
will present
the
"freeze-for-freeze"
proposal as
a concession
to Iran's
right to
enrich
uranium.
The
committee
secretary
was quoted
by Fararou
as stating
flatly that
the proposal
for a
six-week
freeze on
enrichment
"has been
accepted by
Tehran".
The same
parliamentarian
was quoted
as saying
the atomic
energy chief
had declared
that the
"package" of
proposals
from the
"Iran Six"
was still
being
studied and
that Iran
would
respond by
the end of
the week.
The formal
"Iran Six"
proposal
given to
Iranian
officials by
Solana on
June 14 was
a
repackaging
of the
mid-2006
proposal to
Tehran. But
it was
accompanied
by a
six-week
"freeze-for-freeze"
proposal
under which
Iran would
not increase
the level of
its
enrichment
efforts and
the "Iran
Six" would
freeze the
movement
towards
tougher
sanctions
against
Iran,
according to
diplomats in
London
quoted by
Reuters on
June 21.
That would
enable
"pre-negotiations"
to begin
between the
two sides on
"parameters
for formal
negotiations",
according to
the
diplomats.
Beginning
formal
negotiations,
however, was
said to
require that
Iran "fully
suspend"
enrichment,
meaning that
it would
actually
temporarily
halt the
enrichment.
The formal
negotiations
envisaged
would last
"up to six
months",
according to
the
diplomats
cited by
Reuters,
during which
time the
halt to
enrichment
activities
would have
to continue.
The remarks
by energy
committee
secretary
Hosseini
implied that
Iran's
commitment
was only to
the six-week
freeze on
the level of
its nuclear
activities
and not to
an actual
suspension
of
enrichment
as required
for the
formal stage
of
negotiations.
But Mottaki,
in remarks
at a
luncheon
meeting with
reporters at
the Iranian
mission in
New York,
suggested
that the
Iranians
might be
prepared to
go further.
Mottaki said
that there
were
sufficient
commonalities
between the
Solana
proposal on
behalf of
the "Iran
Six" and
Iran's own
proposals
for
negotiations
to provide
the basis
for talks.
That remark,
paralleling
the
unattributed
view
reported by
ISNA on
Monday,
suggested
that Iran
was
preparing to
enter into
substantive
negotiations.
Furthermore,
Mottaki
failed to
repeat the
standard
Iranian
statement
that
enrichment
was Iran's
legitimate
right, even
though he
was
repeatedly
questioned
on the
point.
Further
indicating
an Iranian
desire to
take
advantage of
any
diplomatic
opening in a
period of
rising
threat from
Washington
and Tel
Aviv, Ali
Akbar
Velyati, a
top foreign
policy
adviser to
Khamenei,
said,
"Americans
wanted Iran
not to
accept
Solana.
Therefore
our
interests
imply that
we should
embrace
Solana."
Gareth
Porter is an
investigative
historian
and
journalist
specializing
in US
national
security
policy. The
paperback
edition of
his latest
book, Perils
of
Dominance:
Imbalance of
Power and
the Road to
War in
Vietnam, was
published in
2006.
Gareth
Porter is an
investigative
historian
and
journalist
specialising
in U.S.
national
security
policy. The
paperback
edition of
his latest
book,
"Perils of
Dominance:
Imbalance of
Power and
the Road to
War in
Vietnam",
was
published in
2006.
Copyright
nter Press
Service
