? ?
WORLD / Middle East
Iran, IAEA agree on timetable
(AP)
Updated: 2007-08-22 07:26
TEHRAN, Iran - Iran and the UN nuclear watchdog have reached an agreement
on a timetable to respond to questions over Tehran's controversial
nuclear activities, both sides said Tuesday.
Iranian and IAEA officials did not elaborate on the time frame. But the
agreement was expected to provide for easier inspection of Iran's nuclear
facilities by the IAEA as well as urge Tehran to provide detailed answers
on remaining questions over its nuclear activities.
The agreement was announced at the end of two days of talks in Tehran
between senior officials from the International Atomic Energy Agency and
Iranian nuclear negotiators.
"We have now in front of us an agreed working plan," IAEA chief of
delegation Olli Heinonen told reporters. "We have a timeline for the
implementation."
Related readings:
IAEA, Iran begin third round of nuclear talks
Iran denounces US missile defense plans
Peaceful settlement for Iran nuke issue: Hu
Hu, Ahmadinejad discuss Iran nuclear issue
Iraqi PM visits Iran seeking help to rein in violence
Iran rejects face-to-face talks with U.S. over nuclear issue
Senior Iranian nuclear negotiator Javad Vaeedi also said the two sides
agreed on a framework to resolve the outstanding issues over Tehran's
nuclear activities. "The talks produced very great and constructive
progress," he said.
The two sides did not say what the lingering questions were, but it is
believed that they include questions over Iran's past experiments with
small amounts of plutonium.
The talks were seen as critical because they will be the basis for a
progress report the IAEA chief, Mohamed ElBaradei, is scheduled to
deliver before the agency's September meeting. Heinonen said he expected
that report to be ready by next week and would include details from the
talks.
Past IAEA reports expressed concerns that Tehran has secretly developed
elements of a more sophisticated enrichment program than it has made
public, that it might not have accounted for all the plutonium it
processed in the past, and that its military might have been involved in
enrichment. Tehran insists its nuclear program is strictly civilian-run.
Two previous rounds of talks, in Vienna and Tehran earlier this summer,
appeared to have improved relations between Iran and the UN agency.
But Tuesday's agreement coincided with a warning from Iran's top nuclear
negotiator to the U.N. Security Council that imposing new sanctions
against Iran will make Tehran's cooperation with the IAEA "fruitless,"
state television reported.
Ali Larijani also accused the United States of seeking to undermine the
progress achieved during talks between Iran and the IAEA in order to
heighten tensions.
"If they take any illogical move (to impose new sanctions), the trend of
Iran's cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency as well as
the talks will become sterile," state television quoted Larijani as
saying.
The US and its allies fear Tehran is using its nuclear program as a cover
to produce atomic weapons. Iran denies the charge, saying its program is
solely geared toward generating electricity.
Iran has been agreeing to make new concessions in an apparent attempt to
stave off a third round of sanctions. Last month, Tehran offered a rare
concession and allowed IAEA inspectors to revisit a heavy-water reactor
under construction that has been off-limits since April.
Top World News ?
* Bush: It's up to Iraqi people to determine govt's fate
* Iraq trial opens against ex-officials
* Russia: Czechs make "big mistake" on US radar
* German woman abducted in Kabul
* Powerful earthquake rattles Peru, killing 510
Today's Top News ?
* China raises interest rates again to curb inflation
* Chinese abroad to be better protected
* US act on poultry reflects 'protectionism'
* CIA missed chances to thwart al-Qaida
* China working all-out for trapped miners
Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours
Learn Chinese, Chinese language, Learning Materials, Mandarin audio lessons, Chinese writing lessons, Chinese vocabulary lists, About chinese characters, News in Chinese, Go to China, Travel to China, Study in China, Teach in China, Dictionaries, Learn Chinese Painting, Your name in Chinese, Chinese calligraphy, Chinese songs, Chinese proverbs, Chinese poetry, Chinese tattoo, Beijing 2008 Olympics, Mandarin Phrasebook, Chinese editor, Pinyin editor, China Travel, Travel to Beijing, Travel to Tibet

No comments:
Post a Comment