IRAN - Feb 18 - Tehran Dashes Hopes Of Nuclear Compromise.Iran's foreign ministry dismisses talk of immediate suspension of uranium enrichment ahead of this week's UN Security Council deadline despite a recent flurry Flurry A drastic volume increase in a specific security. of Iranian diplomacy that had raised hopes of a compromise. Intensifying in·ten·si·fy v. in·ten·si·fied, in·ten·si·fy·ing, in·ten·si·fies v.tr. 1. To make intense or more intense: US pressure on Iran, particularly over Tehran's alleged support for Shi'ite militias in Iraq, has led Tehran's political elite to call on the leadership to exercise caution on the nuclear issue, fearing it would be used by Washington as a justification for military action. A diplomatic initiative by Tehran, which took senior envoys of Ayat Ali Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader, to Russia, Europe and Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia (sä `dē ərā`bēə, sou`–, sô–), officially Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, kingdom (2005 est. pop. this
month, sent a conciliatory con·cil·i·ate v. con·cil·i·at·ed, con·cil·i·at·ing, con·cil·i·ates v.tr. 1. To overcome the distrust or animosity of; appease. 2. message. This included a willingness to consider some form of suspension of the most sensitive part of the nuclear programme. "There is no idea that cannot from the outset be considered", Ali Akbar Velayati Dr. Ali Akbar Velayati (علیاکبر ولایتی; born June 25, 1945 in Shemiran) is an Iranian politician and a pediatrician, currently an Advisor in International Affairs to the Supreme Leader. , a top adviser to Khamenei, told France's Liberation newspaper, last week. But Muhammad-Ali Hosseini, spokesman for Iran's foreign ministry, on Sunday said that there was "currently...no logical and legal justification for suspension". The International Atomic Energy Agency International Atomic Energy Agency: see Atomic Energy Agency, International. International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) International organization officially founded in 1957 to promote the peaceful use of nuclear energy. , the UN nuclear watchdog, will report on Feb 21 on Iranian compliance with a December UN Security Council resolution. That decision imposed sanctions on Iran's trade in sensitive nuclear technology and material to force it to stop uranium enrichment, a process that can produce fuel for nuclear reactors or atomic weapons. Analysts in Tehran say that while discussion of "suspension" is no longer taboo taboo or tabu (both: tăb `, tə–), prohibition of an act or the use of an object or word under pain of punishment. , the proposals
it is considering fall short of the full, unconditional halt that the UN
is demanding. Iran has suggested, for example, that it could temporarily
stop nuclear experiments and enter into negotiations with world powers -
but only if it had guarantees that it could resume when the talks ended.
The proposal has already been rejected by European governments. Another
idea more recently floated - Iranians say by Swiss diplomats Some famous diplomats include: Afghanistan
n. Raw material required for an industrial process. Noun 1. feedstock - the raw material that is required for some industrial process raw material, staple - material suitable for manufacture or use or finishing into the centrifuges, the rotating ro·tate v. ro·tat·ed, ro·tat·ing, ro·tates v.intr. 1. To turn around on an axis or center. 2. device used for enriching uranium, but to continue spinning them. Western diplomats say this option is unacceptable as well, allowing Iran to master nuclear technology. The nuclear crisis has provoked a heated debate in Tehran, with critics of radical Pres Mahmoud Ahmadi-Nejad arguing that his influence has turned the world more firmly against Iran's nuclear programme. Reformists, who led the previous government, and so-called "conservative pragmatists" associated with Hashemi Rafsanjani, the powerful former president, share the regime's goal of pursuing a nuclear programme (although everyone denies atomic weapons ambitions). But they say there are times when Iran needs to step back and build more confidence with the international community. The dilemma facing Ayat Khamenei, however, is that suspension was tried under the former government - in 2004 and 2005 - yet failed to convince the west that Iran should maintain a nuclear programme. Officials in Tehran also argue that they have already compromised, with their demands now limited to maintaining a small-scale enrichment programme, rather than the industrial production of fuel. Nasser Hadian, a professor of politics at Tehran University, said full suspension might well become a serious option for Iran - but not before enrichment research reaches a more advanced technical level. "Then Iran can announce victory - and it can suspend", he said. |
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`dē ərā`bēə, sou`–, sô–)
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