In Malaysia, Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki reiterated this 
stance on Monday. 
"The main incentive for Iran is to recognize the essential right of Iran to 
have nuclear technology," he said. "The time of (issuing) threats to other 
nations is over. Selective approach to humanitarian issues is over." 
The Security Council gave Iran until the end of April to suspend all 
activities linked to enrichment. Instead of complying, Iran upped the ante, 
announcing last month that it had for the first time successfully enriched 
uranium and was doing research on advanced centrifuges that would let it produce 
more of the material in less time. 
Indirectly linked to any deal up for approval by the foreign ministers would 
be agreement on a key issue that for months has hobbled joint action by the 
Security Council's permanent members on formulating a possible Security Council 
resolution tough enough for Washington while also acceptable to Moscow, a close 
ally of Tehran. 
Wrangling within the council has hampered its work since it became actively 
involved in March, two months after Iran's nuclear file was referred to it by 
the 35-nation board of the International Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N.'s 
nuclear monitoring agency. 
Russia and China have opposed calls by the United States, Britain and France 
for a resolution that would threaten sanctions and be enforceable by military 
action. 
The compromise proposal is meant to break that deadlock. 
In the event that Iran remains defiant, the proposal ¡ª as outlined to the AP 
by diplomats familiar with the text ¡ª calls for a Security Council resolution 
imposing sanctions under Chapter VII, Article 41 of the U.N. Charter. But it 
avoids any reference to Article 42 ¡ª which is the trigger for possible military 
action to enforce any such resolution. 
And it specifically calls for new consultations among the five permanent 
Security Council members on any further steps against Iran. That is meant to 
dispel past complaints by the Russians and Chinese that once the screws on Iran 
are tightened, it would automatically start a process leading to military 
involvement. 
Still other potential hurdles remain. The proposed resolution still would 
declare Iran a threat to international peace ¡ª something also opposed by Moscow 
and Beijing. 
Among the possible sanctions, according to a draft proposal shared in part 
with the AP, are a visa ban on government officials, the freezing of assets, 
blocking financial transactions by government figures and those involved in the 
country's nuclear program, an arms embargo and a blockade on the shipping of 
refined oil products to Iran. 
If Tehran agrees to suspend enrichment, enter new negotiations on its nuclear 
program and lift a ban on intrusive inspections by the IAEA, they would be 
offered rewards including agreement by the international community to "suspend 
discussion of Iran's file at the Security Council." 
The package also promised help in "the building of new light-water reactors 
in Iran," offered an assured supply of nuclear fuel for up to five years, and 
asked Tehran to accept a plan that would move its enrichment program to Russia.