WORLD / Middle East

    IAEA report likely to find Iran defying UN
    (Reuters)
    Updated: 2006-04-28 08:39

    The world's nuclear watchdog, which reports to the U.N. Security Council on Friday, is likely to confirm Iran has flouted demands to stop enriching uranium, a verdict that could unleash moves to hit Tehran with sanctions.


    Iran's nuclear energy chief Gholamreza Aghazadeh leaves Vienna's U.N. headquarters April 26, 2006. The world's nuclear watchdog , The International Atomic Energy Agency, which reports to the U.N. Security Council on Friday is likely to confirm Iran has flouted demands to stop enriching uranium, a verdict that could unleash moves to hit Tehran with sanctions. [Reuters]

    International Atomic Energy Agency chief Mohamed ElBaradei was also expected to say Iran was still stalling IAEA inquiries into its nuclear work, the other salient issue cited in a 30-day Council deadline for Iranian cooperation that expires on Friday.

    But Iranian defiance has only hardened over the last month, with Tehran saying it has enriched enough uranium to fuel power plants for the first time and is researching a machine to enrich even faster, adding that its nuclear drive was irreversible.

    In the two days before the report, Iran has vowed to hit U.S. targets worldwide if attacked by Washington which has not ruled out war as a last resort to rein in Tehran.

    And Iran's U.N. ambassador said on Thursday Iran will not comply with an expected security council resolution aimed at curbing its nuclear ambitions because its programs posed no threat to international peace and security,

    "If the Security Council decides to take decisions that are not within its competence, then Iran does not feel obliged to obey," Iran's U.N. Ambassador Javad Zarif told reporters.

    Diplomats anticipated no big surprises in the report.

    "ElBaradei obviously will have to report that far from suspending enrichment, Iran is steaming ahead," said one Western diplomat accredited to the Vienna-based IAEA.

    Diplomats said questions persisted over Iranian research on state-of-the-art "P-2" centrifuges, documents found that show how to design an atom bomb core, and intelligence reports of links between uranium-ore processing, high-explosives tests and a missile warhead design.

    Mark Fitzpatrick, nuclear analyst at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, said world leaders would look for any substantiation in the report of Iran's claims to rapid progress toward mastering the enrichment process.

    "Answers to such questions will be important in helping the world understand the degree of urgency of the crisis and scope for diplomacy. If the IAEA cannot say much about Iran's progress, then policy-makers will rely more on worst-case scenarios," he told Reuters.

    Iran says its nuclear activity aims solely to generate electricity. Western powers see a smokescreen for an atom bomb project in the Islamic Republic, which wants Israel destroyed.

    Washington, backed by Britain and France, favors limited sanctions if Iran refuses to shelve enrichment quickly. Russia and China, the Security Council's other two veto-holding permanent members who want to protect lucrative stakes in Iran's energy sector, have so far opposed such moves.

    "To be credible, the Security Council of course has to act," Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said before talks on the issue with NATO foreign ministers in Bulgaria on Thursday. "It cannot have its word and its will simply ignored by a (U.N.) member state."

    Chinese and U.S. diplomats said the United States was trying to arrange a meeting on Iran of foreign ministers of the five permanent Council members and Germany in New York on May 9.

    Diplomats said ElBaradei was vexed by Iran's refusal to "pause" enrichment work even for a limited time to ease tensions, its failure to make good on promises of better cooperation with probes, and by its growing brinkmanship with world powers.

    But they said he was also unhappy about the Security Council's intervention and sanctions threats that some IAEA veterans fear could drive Iran out of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

    Iran has invoked that specter of late, threatening to freeze relations with the IAEA and asking what is the point of staying in the NPT without a right to peaceful enrichment technology.

    As heated rhetoric between Iran and the West has escalated, the IAEA has studiously avoided comment that might be seized on by one or the other side and has sought preserve technical neutrality key to its basic inspections regime in Iran.

    A diplomat close to ElBaradei said his report would "just lay out the facts," not pass judgment on Iranian behavior. "That will be up to the Security Council," he said.

     
     

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