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NUKEWARS
Iran envoy tells West: no talks with 'knife in the neck'
by Staff Writers
United Nations (AFP) Jan 18, 2011


US may punish China firms evading Iran sanctions: Clinton
Washington (AFP) Jan 19, 2011 - US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Wednesday that some Chinese firms were still failing to comply fully with UN sanctions and suggested Washington could impose its own sanctions on them. "We think that there are some entities within China that we have brought to the attention of the Chinese leadership that are still not as, shall we say, as in compliance as we would like them to be," Clinton told ABC television. "And we are pushing very hard on that and we may be proposing more unilateral sanctions," the chief US diplomat said during the interview with the network during the state visit by Chinese President Hu Jintao. "Now, the Chinese response is they are enforcing the sanctions they agreed to in the Security Council; they did not agree to either European, American, or Japanese sanctions that were imposed unilaterally," she said. "Our response to that is, look, we share the same goal, we need to prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear weapons state; so therefore, even though technically you did not sign up to our unilateral sanctions, we expect you to help us implement them," Clinton said.

In October, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu insisted Beijing was implementing UN sanctions against Iran after Washington said it had asked Beijing to look into whether some Chinese firms were evading the restrictions. China is Iran's closest trading partner and has major energy interests in the Islamic republic, which Western governments suspect of seeking to develop nuclear weapons capability. Tehran strongly denies the allegations, but Beijing still voted for a fourth set of UN sanctions against Iran in June last year over its refusal to freeze uranium enrichment. The Washington Post reported in October that the United States believes some Chinese firms are helping Iran to improve its missile technology and develop nuclear weapons, and has asked Beijing to prevent such activity. Crowley confirmed at the time that Washington had provided information to Beijing about individual Chinese companies, "and the Chinese assured us that they will investigate."

Iran wants to work with the international powers on nuclear proliferation but will not negotiate with "a knife in the neck," its UN envoy said Tuesday.

Ahead of new nuclear talks between Iran and the major powers, Ambassador Mohammad Khazaee said his country was not worried about international sanctions.

"We have shown we know how to fight, we know how to overcome sanctions, we know how to overcome our problems," Khazaee told reporters.

"We are not going to accept suggestions based on pressure and threats. It is not going to work to put a knife in the neck of somebody, or a sword, and at the same time asking him to negotiate."

Saeed Jalili, Iran's main negotiator, will meet representatives of Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States in Istanbul on Friday and Saturday.

The UN Security Council has passed four rounds of sanctions against Iran for refusing to halt its uranium enrichment program.

The West suspects the Islamic republic is trying to build a nuclear bomb, a charge that Iran denies, saying the program is peaceful and aimed at producing nuclear energy for civilian purposes.

Khazaee said Iran wanted recognition of its strategic importance and had made proposals that could be a "roadmap" to better relations.

"We are talking about a country which from a regional point of view, economic point of view, political point of view, is a heavyweight champion in the region," he said.

"We are shouting at the world, we are telling (the international powers) that if disarmament is a real concern and you are truly concerned about that, if proliferation is an issue, if terrorism is an issue, if drug trafficking is an issue, we are ready to talk the world."

The envoy said the Istanbul talks should "pave the ground for future cooperation."

"Engagement is a strategic approach, not a tactic to buy more time," he added, while accusing the United States and its allies of making a "miscalculation about Iran, about the power of Iran and the region."

"We are clever enough to be ready for any further misjudgment, pressure," Khazaee warned.

"In case if Iran is threatened by a few, I should say manipulated ideas, or be under pressure, definitely Iran will react accordingly."

He rejected suggestions that a new Middle East conflict is likely, however.

"Having more confrontation or war in the region, if it is Iran or Syria, against Saudi Arabia or against any countries in the region, is playing with fire in a region which can fire up some or all of the world," he said.

earlier related report
Iran, world powers to resume nuclear talks
Istanbul (AFP) Jan 19, 2011 - Iran and six world powers meet Friday in Istanbul for a second round of talks, amid guarded hope for progress in efforts to settle tensions over Tehran's disputed nuclear programme.

The meeting follows a first round in Geneva last month, which broke a 14-month hiatus in negotiations between the Islamic republic and the so-called 5+1 group of Britain, China, France, Russia, the United States and Germany.

The Geneva talks ended without any tangible outcome but the fact that the two sides agreed to continue the negotiations and fixed a second meeting in six weeks' time is seen as a positive sign, notably by the host Turkey, which is close to Iran and insists on a diplomatic settlement to the row.

"The resumption of the talks is a good development, but one should not expect too much on the essence," said Bruno Tertrais, an analyst at the Paris-based Foundation for Strategic Research.

Tehran has insisted its "nuclear dossier" would not be on the agenda of the Istanbul talks, in line with its long-standing policy that the country's "nuclear right" is not up for discussion.

"There will be no problem if three issues -- nuclear disarmament, non-proliferation and peaceful nuclear activities -- are discussed," Abolfazl Zohrevand, adviser of Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Said Jalili, told the ISNA agency Monday.

"If Westerners want to deal separately with the Iranian nuclear issue, Istanbul is not the right place since Iran's nuclear programme is transparent and overseen by the agency," he said, referring to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

But EU foreign policy chief Cathrine Ashton, who will lead the 5+1 delegation at the talks, insisted on the contrary.

"I'm very clear that we are coming to discuss the nuclear issue and that is what we will do," she said last week when she travelled to Istanbul for preparations ahead of the meeting with Iran.

"Our purpose in meeting is to now look for tangible credible ways to make a move forward," she stressed.

Prior to previous talks with the world powers, Tehran has similarly insisted that its nuclear file is not up for discussion.

Western powers suspect that Iran's nuclear programme masks a drive to develop an atomic bomb.

Iran denies the charges, insisting its programme is a peaceful effort to producing nuclear energy.

But it has refused to stop uranium enrichment, prompting the UN Security Council to punish it with a fourth round of sanctions in June.

Additionally, the United States and the European Union have slapped a series of their own unilateral sanctions on Tehran.

Speaking Saturday, Iran's foreign minister and atomic chief Ali Akbar Salehi played down the sanctions and declared that the country's uranium enrichment programme was progressing "very strongly".

Washington however believes the sanctions have already started to hamper Tehran's nuclear activities.

"The most recent analysis is that the sanctions have been working... They have made it much more difficult for Iran to pursue its nuclear ambitions. Iran has technological problems that has made it slow down its timetable," US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said last week.

Tertrais commented that the United States had not yet reached the "stage of impatience" with Iran.

"Since the summer of 2010, tensions have eased. The sanctions are beginning to be felt and there have been sabotage operations," he said, referring to reports that the United States and Israel developed a destructive computer worm to sabotage Iran's efforts to make a nuclear bomb.

The United States and Israel have not ruled out taking military action against Iran to prevent it from acquiring nuclear weapons.

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Frankfurt (AFP) Jan 18, 2011
Trade between Germany and Iran grew last year despite EU nuclear sanctions against Tehran and as major German groups curtailed activities there as a result, official data showed on Tuesday. German exports to Iran rose 2.6 percent to 3.5 billion euros ($4.7 billion) from January to November, according to provisional figures provided by the national statistics office Destatis. Imports from ... read more


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