WORLD / Middle East
Iran, IAEA set more nuclear talks on Tuesday
(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-07-24 01:17
VIENNA - Iran will resume talks with the UN nuclear watchdog on Tuesday
to clarify its atomic activity, an Iranian official said, a process
diplomats say has slowed moves to adopt tougher UN sanctions against
Tehran.
The International Atomic Energy Agency won modest gestures from Iran in a
first round of talks in Tehran on July 13, like permission for IAEA
inspectors to revisit a heavy-water reactor under construction and a
pledge to produce a plan for better IAEA access to Iran's underground
uranium enrichment plant. Ali Asghar Soltanieh, Iran's ambassador to the
IAEA, said its deputy nuclear negotiator Javad Vaeedi would reconvene
with the agency's nuclear safeguards director Olli Heinonen at IAEA
headquarters in Vienna on Tuesday morning.
"The second round will be held, continuing the discussions of the
modalities on how to deal with the outstanding issues, at the same level
as in Tehran, and will go on all day," said Soltanieh, who will take
part. "The agenda is clear, a work plan to deal with these issues. I
don't know (if there will be a breakthrough)."
The IAEA declined immediate comment.
European diplomats told Reuters last week that Western powers had quietly
shelved efforts to toughen UN sanctions against Iran until September to
see whether Tehran stopped obstructing IAEA investigations ongoing since
2003.
IAEA Director Mohamed Elbaradei has said Iran's pledge last month to work
out an action plan within 60 days to counter suspicions it is secretly
trying to build atomic bombs has raised hope of defusing a volatile
standoff between Tehran and Western powers.
ElBaradei has also cited what he said was a slowdown in the expansion of
Iran's uranium enrichment detected by IAEA inspectors during a visit to
the Natanz plant in early July.
Tehran has threatened to call off its rapprochement with UN investigators
if the West moves to pass another sanctions resolution on top of two
others enacted since December.
Iran says it is refining uranium only to generate more electricity and
allow it to export more of its bountiful oil.
Among the issues the IAEA wants to get to the bottom of are the origin of
traces of highly enriched -- or weapons-capable -- uranium found on some
equipment, experiments with plutonium, and the status of Iranian research
into advanced centrifuges that can enrich three times as fast as the
model Iran now uses.
The talks have also addressed steps Iran could take towards more
transparency about its declared nuclear activity.
Iran approved an inspector trip to the Arak heavy-water complex, a
possible future source of bomb-grade plutonium in Western eyes, before
the end of July, four months after halting such access in protest at
existing sanctions.
Iran also agreed to accredit five of 10 inspectors the IAEA proposed to
help replace 38 from Western states barred early this year, and to
finalise arrangements in early August for closer IAEA monitoring of the
Natanz plant, diplomats said.
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