U.N. Council faces impasse on Iran crisis (Reuters) Updated: 2006-03-14 14:34
The United States, Britain and France on Tuesday will move the Iran crisis to
the full U.N. Security Council after failing to get support from Russia and
China for proposals to rein in Tehran's nuclear ambitions.
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Members of the United Nations Security Council are seen during a
meeting at U.N. headquarters in New York, July 30, 2004. The five
veto-holding powers of the U.N. Security Council on Monday struggled to
clear the way for a council statement on reining in Iran's nuclear
programs, but agreement appeared elusive.
[REUTERS] |
At issue is British-French draft of a council statement that would call on
Iran to suspend uranium enrichment efforts, which the West believes are a cover
for bomb making, and obtain a progress report from the Vienna-based
International Atomic Energy Agency in a short period of time.
The talks on Tuesday among the 15-nation Security Council at France's mission
to the United Nations are scheduled several hours after the five veto-holding
permanent council members meet again in an effort to find a compromise on the
text.
"We're trying to hold the perm five together," U.S. Ambassador John Bolton
said on Monday, after the third session among the five ended without agreement.
"But reality is reality and time is an important factor given the Iranians
continue to progress toward overcoming their technological difficulties" in
enriching uranium, Bolton told reporters.
If the split continues, the Western powers may decide to drop the idea of a
Security Council statement, which requires the consent of all 15 members.
Instead they are considering putting a resolution to a vote and force Russia and
China to abstain or veto, thereby breaking any semblance of unity.
IAEA ROLE
Russia and China have been uneasy about involving the Security Council, which
has the authority to impose sanctions, and want the IAEA to retain control.
The United States wants Mohamed ElBaradei, the director-general of the IAEA,
to report to the council within 14 days on Iran's compliance. Russia and China
prefer a six-week deadline and want the report to go to the IAEA rather than to
the Security Council, the envoys said.
But Bolton said the case was now before the Security council, not just the
IAEA, the U.N. nuclear watchdog.
"There's no reason why a specialized or technical agency of the United
Nations can't report to the Security Council on a matter within the Security
Council's jurisdiction. That's certainly our view," Bolton told reporters.
Iran, which denies it is trying to make a nuclear weapon, had rejected an
offer from Russia to enrich Iranian uranium on Russian soil. But it then wanted
to reopen the talks, which Moscow's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said would
happen soon.
But Lavrov expressed impatience with mixed messages from Iran, saying he was
"extremely disappointed with the way Iran in the course of these talks."
"Iran is absolutely no help to those who want to find peaceful ways to solve
this problem," he said on Monday.
ElBaradei's report to the council a week ago said Iran had disregarded a
February resolution from the 35-nation IAEA board urging it to suspend all
enrichment-related work and answer inquiries on its nuclear program.
Instead, Iran is testing a cascade of 20 centrifuges -- machines that convert
uranium UF6 gas into fuel for atomic power reactors or, if purified to high
levels, weapons.
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