UPDATED ON:
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 2007
10:35 MECCA TIME, 7:35 GMT
 
NEWS MIDDLE EAST
London talks to tackle Iran plans
Tehran has brushed off the threat of sanctions over its nuclear programme [EPA]
The five permanent members of the UN Security Council along with Germany are meeting in London to discuss further sanctions against Iran over its nuclear activities.
 
Diplomats from the US, Russia, China, France, the UK plus Germany will discuss on Monday how to make Iran meet UN demands to halt its nuclear enrichment activities.
The meeting comes after the UN nuclear watchdog confirmed Iran had ignored a deadline to suspend nuclear plans.
 
But the West's efforts to curb Iran's ambitions seem to have fallen on deaf ears in Tehran with president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad saying Iran has "no reverse gear" on its programme.

Tehran made it clear that it would not approve the language of threats and reiterated that it would rather endure sanctions than back down on a programme it says is a matter of national pride.

 

Ahmadinejad was quoted by Iran's student news agency ISNA as saying on Sunday: "Iran has obtained the technology to produce nuclear fuel and Iran's move is like a train ... which has no brake and no reverse gear".

 

"We dismantled the rear gear and brakes of the train and threw them away sometime ago," Ahmadinejad was quoted as telling a gathering of Islamic clerics.

 

Another Iranian official affirmed Tehran's determination to press on with its nuclear programme, saying that the Islamic republic was ready for any possible scenario "even for war".

 

Manouchehr Mohammadi, one of the deputies to the foreign minister, was quoted by ISNA as saying at a conference in the central city of Isfahan:

 

"We have prepared ourselves for any situation, even for war."

 

'Dangerous' stand-off

Condoleezza Rice, the US secretary of state, said that what Iran needed was not a reverse gear, but a stop button.

 

US power
in the Gulf

Aboard the USS John C Stennis

She also pledged direct talks with Iranian officials if Tehran halts its nuclear enrichment programme.

 

The diplomatic stand-off has also been described as "dangerous" by foreign ministers from seven Muslim states who met in Pakistan on Sunday.

 

"It is vital that all issues must be resolved through diplomacy and there must be no resort to use of force," said a statement agreed by the ministers representing Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Indonesia and Malaysia.

New Zealand and Australia stepped into the controversy and urged
Iran to be more transparent about its nuclear programme.

 

Hours prior to the London meeting, Alexander Downer, the Australian foreign minister, who is in the New Zealand capital, Wellington, for talks with counterpart Winston Peters, said Iran had failed to comply with the demands of the UN Security Council.

 

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The concern of the international community is how to get Iran to cease its uranium enrichment programme and "cooperate fully in an open and transparent way with the International Atomic Energy Agency," Downer said.

 

Helen Clark, the New Zealand Prime Minister, said: "The problem is the lack of transparency. What the international community is asking for is transparency, open your facilities, be honest, give the information, don't play games ... The pressure has to go on for full disclosure."

 

Iran is accused by the US of pursuing development of nuclear weapons.

 

Tehran denies the charges and says its nuclear programme is for peaceful means.

Source: Al Jazeera & Agencies
Related:
Cheney: Options open against Iran  
(24 Feb 2007)
Iran leaders defend nuclear work  
(24 Feb 2007)
Further Iran sanctions challenged  
(23 Feb 2007)
Analysis: Iran's economic promises  
(26 Feb 2007)
Vying for power: the US and Iran  
(25 Feb 2007)
US power in the Gulf  
(26 Feb 2007)
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