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Outside View: Iran's nuclear maneuvers

Bush backs 'full scope' of Iran findings
US President George W. Bush endorses the "full scope" of last month's US intelligence findings on Iran, the White House said Thursday after Bush seemed to distance himself from the report. "The president stands by the full scope of the findings in that they were put together by incredibly dedicated people that did their best work and put their best views out," spokesman Tony Fratto told reporters. On Tuesday, the president had emphasized that the US National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) was crafted by "independent" spy agencies that "come to conclusions separate from what I may or may not want." And his chief spokeswoman, Dana Perino, refused to say that he endorsed the NIE's chief finding that Tehran shelved a nuclear weapons program in 2003, in what was seen as a blow to Washington's efforts to confront its archfoe. Media accounts of Bush's message to Middle East leaders during a week-long trip to the region cited anonymous officials as saying that he distanced himself from the NIE, which is the consensus of all 16 US spy agencies. "He does encourage people -- and that's the point that he made repeatedly on his trip -- to look at the full conclusions and implications for what the NIE asserted in those conclusions, and they include the fact that Iran had a weapons program," said Fratto. "Iran continues to move on two other components of what would be necessary to deliver a nuclear weapon, both on enrichment and on delivery mechanisms," said Fratto. "And that is a crucial fact that should be read the right way." The NIE found that the Islamic republic has defied international pressure including UN sanctions to freeze uranium enrichment, which can be a key step towards getting a nuclear weapon.
by Pyotr Goncharov
Moscow (UPI) Jan 17, 2007
Mohamed ElBaradei, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, and U.S. President Bush visited the Middle East almost simultaneously.

Bush went there to whip up support for an anti-Iranian coalition, while ElBaradei was in Tehran for a meeting with Iran's senior officials. The IAEA and Iran agreed to broaden cooperation and step up efforts to resolve outstanding ambiguities in Tehran's nuclear program.

Bush and his team must solve the Iranian nuclear problem, because many things depend on this, from the security of Israel, America's main ally in the region, to the possibility of losing U.S. positions there. Therefore the Iranian issue was discussed in Israel on a par with a Palestinian-Israeli settlement.

In the meantime, the Iranian Foreign Ministry sent to the ambassadors of the Gulf Cooperation Council countries a letter from the Iranian president in which he called on the GCC countries to promote all-round cooperation. The letter was delivered while Bush was making his speech in Abu Dhabi.

By doing this, Tehran showed that it would not cede the Middle East to the United States, especially after the Iranian president for the first time attended the summit of the GCC countries in December 2007.

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad used the occasion to propose that the GCC countries set up a regional security organization.

So far, Tehran has been moving one step ahead of the Untied States. Last weekend ElBaradei was in Tehran discussing Iran's nuclear program and outstanding IAEA questions related to the essence of Iranian nuclear research. His visit has not changed anything in the nuclear sphere, but it is significant that the head of the IAEA came to Tehran at this particular time at the request of the Iranian leaders.

This year Iran has been working hard to find a solution to the problem that suits its interests. It has sent a letter to the U.N. secretary-general insisting that the Security Council return the Iranian nuclear dossier to the IAEA. Its arguments are based on a declassified U.S. intelligence report that said Iran halted nuclear weapons work in 2003.

Tehran also warned in its letter that the continued involvement of the Security Council in the Iranian nuclear question would only complicate the situation and undermine respect for the IAEA. It writes that it would not stop its uranium enrichment program.

Tehran knows that its stance is not acceptable to its opponents and that European experts want Iran above all to stop its uranium enrichment project. By creating a full-cycle enrichment system, Iran would enter the path leading to possession of nuclear weapons.

It appears that Iran is deliberately exacerbating tensions. Why? The truth is that all the conditions are in place to make 2008 a crucial year for Iran's nuclear program.

One is the March 2007 U.N. Security Council resolution stipulating tougher sanctions should Tehran refuse to curtail its enrichment program. Since then, Iran has been given three 60-day deadlines to stop the program. Tehran disregarded the warnings, and European and U.S. experts say the world cannot continue to pamper Iran without damaging the prestige of the U.N. Security Council.

Secondly, the stances of Iran and the U.N. Security Council are now polarized to such an extent as to rule out compromise. The situation has not improved, although Iran has promised to answer all the IAEA's outstanding questions by the end of February. Even if Iran fulfills its promise, the Security Council will continue to insist that it must stop all kinds of uranium enrichment. This is a matter of principle, because if Iran is allowed to enrich uranium, other countries may follow its example, and the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty will be as good as dead.

The third factor is the upcoming presidential elections in the United States in November 2008, which are forcing the Bush administration to find a solution to the Iranian problem.

The White House will most likely agree to postpone the issue of the Iranian dossier until March, and not only because by that time ElBaradei will have prepared a new report on the Iranian nuclear problem that will include the results of his Tehran visit.

Another important reason is that Russia will have a new president by that time. So waiting looks like a good option this time.

(Pyotr Goncharov is a political commentator for RIA Novosti. This article is reprinted by permission of RIA Novosti. The opinions expressed in this article are the author's and do not necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.)

(United Press International's "Outside View" commentaries are written by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United Press International. In the interests of creating an open forum, original submissions are invited.)

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US diplomat casts doubt on new Iran nuclear deadline
Ljubljana (AFP) Jan 16, 2008
A US diplomat expressed doubts here Wednesday that Iran would clear up remaining questions on its nuclear programme before a mid-February deadline, after failing to live up to earlier promises.







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