US must address Iran's legitimate security concerns: IAEA

Another body blow to America’s pressure tactics against Iran.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060512/ts_nm/nuclear_iran_iaea_dc_1

**US must address Iran security concerns: IAEA **

Iran has legitimate security concerns that the United States must address if the crisis over Tehran’s nuclear programme is to be resolved, the head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog said on Friday. “This is primarily a regional security issue,” Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) he told a debate in The Hague. “Iran is surrounded by countries that have nuclear weapons, Russia has nuclear weapons, Pakistan has nuclear weapons, Israel has nuclear weapons, Iraq has used chemical weapons against them. There is a sense of insecurity,” he said. “When you talk about the Iranian issue, the only solution is a package that should inter alia include security issues.”

Washington and its European allies have been seeking a U.N. Security Council resolution that would oblige Iran to halt all uranium enrichment work or face possible sanctions. But Russia and China have resisted the move and Washington agreed this week to let Europeans first devise a package of benefits for Iran in return for cooperation, putting back a decision on a possible resolution for about two weeks. Tehran says it only wants to produce low-grade enriched uranium to use in atomic power reactors, not the highly enriched uranium needed to make bombs. ElBaradei said only full engagement by the United States could address Iran’s security concerns, as well as other grievances that have accumulated over the last 50 years. “I’m happy to see that the U.S. is becoming more and more engaged because … a final solution to Iran needs the full engagement of the U.S.,” he said. “When you are talking about security, there is only one country that can talk to Iran and that is the U.S., it’s not Europe. Europe can talk economics, it can talk trade … but it cannot talk about hard security issues.” ElBaradei said while Iran still had to clarify a number of issues with the IAEA, inspectors had not seen any “significant” nuclear material being undeclared or diverted into weapons. “We haven’t seen a clear and present danger. We haven’t seen an imminent threat,” he said, adding he agreed with suggestions by U.S. officials that Iran was five to 10 years from a nuclear weapon.

Re: US must address Iran’s legitimate security concerns: IAEA

http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200605/s1637795.htm

EU plans to woo Iran away from nuclear program

The European Union is planning to offer incentives to Iran to get it to halt its nuclear program. The package includes freer trade and political rewards in return for a stop on uranium enrichment. Iran will be encouraged to import the fuel it needs for its civil nuclear power stations, rather than producing its own. In return the European Union would offer freer trade and political incentives. The ideas will be considered by the five permanent members of the UN Security Council, as well as Germany at a meeting next week.

It is a measure of the west’s desperation that it has had to resort to such an incentive package. The chance of getting tougher wording on a UN resolution to threaten Iran appears slim. Both China and Russia which have seats on the Security Council and the power of veto, do not want to support any move which might open the door to military action.