Tehran, October 03: The head of the UN atomic watchdog was expected to arrive in Tehran at the weekend after Washington and its allies demanded quick progress from Tehran in revived talks on the nuclear standoff.
International Atomic Energy Agency chief Mohamed ElBaradei will meet Ali Akbar Salehi, head of the Iranian Atomic Energy Organisation, an Iranian official said in Geneva on Friday.
The visit will take place at the start of the Iranian week, which begins on Saturday, he added.
US President Barack Obama on Thursday demanded swift and “constructive” action from Iran following the crucial nuclear talks in Geneva on Thursday, and warned that his patience for dialogue was limited.
But Obama conceded the meeting between six world powers and Tehran, which included the highest-level direct talks between the United States
and Iran in three decades, marked a “constructive” start to defusing the nuclear standoff.
The talks were the first for 15 months, and Western officials in Geneva acknowledged that it marked Iran’s “engagement” on its nuclear programme after they said Iran refused to talk about it since July 2008.
France said the talks were a “step in the right direction” but added it would judge results through Iran’s actions, while Russia voiced “cautious optimism” so long as the agreements were respected within the set timeframe.
Senior US officials in Geneva said part of the outcome might temper more immediate fears, especially in the Middle East, that Iran had accumulated enough enriched uranium to produce a nuclear weapon.
Iran insists it has a right to civilian nuclear energy, but the partly covert build-up of its nuclear programme in recent years, especially uranium enrichment, has fuelled suspicions in the West and Israel that Tehran is hiding a nuclear weapons programme.
Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator who led Tehran’s delegation at the Geneva talks reiterated late Friday upon his return that enriching uranium was his country’s “legal” right.
“The right of (uranium) enrichment is part of Iran’s absolute right. One of the legal rights of Iran is to continue enriching activity for peaceful purpose,” Saeed Jalili told reporters at Tehran airport minutes after he arrived from Geneva.
Iran agreed to cooperate “fully and immediately” on a second enrichment facility near the holy city of Qom, EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana said after the Geneva talks on Thursday.
But the six powers — Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States — expected IAEA inspections to be allowed within two weeks, he added.
A senior US administration official said ElBaradei’s visit would deal with the issue, following an outcry over Iran’s belated disclosure last week of construction of the underground uranium enrichment plant.
–Agencies