Iran to talk with world powers again - Ashton
Netanyahu: All the sanctions so far have not set back
the Iranian nuclear programme:
BELGIUM: Iran's main nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili agreed in phone
talks on Thursday to speak again with world powers before the month is
out on Tehran's contested programme, the EU's top diplomat said.
"I proposed, and Dr Jalili agreed, that we talk again after further
reflection at the end of the month," Catherine Ashton said in a
statement after discussing "how to move the talks with Iran on the
nuclear issue forward".
She did not say if these next talks would be face-to-face or more
phone contact, but underlined: "I impressed the need for Iran now to
address the issues we have raised in order to build confidence."
Working on behalf of Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the
United States, European Union High Representative Ashton is trying to
elevate dialogue with Tehran into a stable exchange after tortuous
stop-start diplomacy.
The planned contact will follow face-to-face talks between the pair's
respective deputies in Istanbul in Turkey last week.
Ashton said she had "explored diplomatic ways to resolve
international concerns about Iran's nuclear programme", which Israel and
the West suspect is a cover for efforts to build an atomic bomb, a
charge denied by Iran.
The so-called P5+1 group she represents has told Iran to immediately
stop enriching uranium to the 20 percent level, to ship out its existing
20 percent stock and to shut down a fortified underground enrichment
facility.
Experts say uranium must be enriched to 90 percent purity to make
nuclear bombs, but that 20 percent purity is a key stage in paving the
way towards that capacity.
Iran insists it has a right to uranium enrichment under the nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty and wants Western sanctions on its economy to
be eased.
The US Congress on Wednesday approved punishing new sanctions
targeting Iran's energy and shipbuilding sectors, amid deliberation over
a possible first strike against Iran's nuclear facilities by Israel.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has complained that "all
the sanctions and diplomacy so far have not set back the Iranian
programme by one iota". AFP |