WORLD / Middle East
Iran says it will give no early nuclear reply
(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-07-06 19:50
Iran defied international calls for an early reply to an offer of
incentives aimed at ending a nuclear stand-off, insisting on Thursday it
would use a key July 11 meeting merely to raise questions on the package.
The European Union is due to hold preliminary talks with Iran on Thursday
and more detailed discussions next Tuesday in which it expects a formal
response to a package of technology, trade and other incentives to halt
uranium enrichment.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad walks with his Armenian counterpart
Robert Kocharian (not pictured) during an official meeting in Tehran July
5, 2006. [Reuters]
"The Tuesday meeting is just for removing ambiguities. Iran will not give
its definitive answer at this meeting," an Iranian official, who
requested anonymity, told Reuters.
Major powers have said they want a reply from Tehran by a July 15 Group
of Eight summit in St. Petersburg at the latest. Tehran insists it will
not give its answer before August 22.
Iran postponed talks with EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana in
Brussels on Wednesday in apparent anger at an exiled opposition leader's
visit to the European parliament.
But Iran said its chief nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani would meet Solana
for a private dinner on Thursday.
"What we are looking for (on Thursday) is the first feedback -- the start
of the process of getting a reply," an EU diplomat said of the Thursday
meeting.
"The more they (the Iranians) wait, the more the countries who made the
offer will feel impatient," said the diplomat, who requested anonymity.
However, diplomats say that as Russia and China are unlikely to back any
UN sanctions against Iran at this stage, there is little pressure on
Tehran to respond either at the Brussels talks or before the G8 summit in
Russia.
The United States has accused Iran of having a secret program to build
nuclear weapons. Iran denies the charge, saying its nuclear program is
solely for power generation.
"(If Iran is) trying to stall, it's not going to work," US Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice told reporters in Washington on Wednesday.
Iran says it sees ambiguities in the package of incentives put forward on
June 6 by the five permanent, veto-wielding UN Security Council members
-- the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China -- plus Germany.
The major powers have offered a state-of-the-art nuclear reactor with a
guaranteed fuel supply, economic benefits and support for the idea of a
regional security framework if Iran halts uranium enrichment.
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