Vienna, June 07: Iran’s nuclear drive tops the agenda at a week-long meeting of the UN atomic watchdog starting here Monday as world powers are poised to slap new sanctions on Tehran.
The International Atomic Energy Agency’s 35-member board of governors was scheduled to convene at 10:30 am (0830 GMT) for a heavy agenda, focussing not only on Iran and Syria, but also wider discussions on nuclear programmes in the Middle East.
But it was Iran that was again set to dominate as the UN Security Council prepared to pass another round of punitive actions on Tehran.
Last week, the IAEA circulated its latest report on Iran, in which it found that Tehran is pressing ahead with its contested uranium enrichment activities and is now producing enriched uranium at even higher levels of purification.
The report said Iran had produced at least 5.7 kilos (12.5 pounds) of higher-enriched uranium, ostensibly for a research reactor that makes radioisotopes for medical purposes.
But some claim the material could be ultimately intended for a nuclear weapon.
Iran has so far been enriching uranium to levels of no more than 5.0 percent, but started enriching to close to 20 percent purification in February, saying it wanted to ensure a supply of fuel for the research reactor in case an international supply deal fell through.
While Iran remains the focus for the western members of the IAEA board, Arab countries are hoping to put the spotlight on Israel and have managed to have Tel Aviv included on the agenda for the first time since 1991.
Israel is widely believed to have nuclear weapons, but it maintains a policy of refusing to deny or acknowledge its nuclear arsenal.
IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano recently asked member states for ideas on how to persuade Israel to join the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and accept IAEA inspections.
Amano will not have received many of the answers just yet.
The 35-member board will also discuss Syria.
In a separate report, the IAEA recently complained that Syria had not cooperated with its investigation into allegations that Damascus had been building an undeclared reactor at a remote desert site called Dair Alzour until it was bombed by Israeli planes in September 2007.
The IAEA has been investigating the allegations since 2008 and has already said that the building bore some of the characteristics of a nuclear facility.
UN inspectors also detected “significant” traces of man-made uranium at that site, as yet unexplained by Damascus.
It has also requested access to three other locations allegedly functionally related to Dair Alzour, but so far to no avail.
Iran’s Ahmadinejad to visit China to discuss sanctions
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is heading to China this week to discuss the threat of new UN sanctions over Iran’s nuclear programme, as US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said world powers have the necessary votes at the Security Council.
Ahmadinejad will be attending Expo Shanghai 2010, but will also meet top Chinese officials to discuss Iran’s nuclear programme, the threat of sanctions and a fuel swap deal for a Tehran research reactor brokered by Brazil and Turkey last month, Iranian state television reported on Monday.
His visit to Security Council veto-wielding permanent member China takes on particular significance as a vote on a new sanctions package looms after the United States introduced a draft resolution last month.
China, which has emerged in recent years as Iran’s main trading partner, continues to insist on diplomacy to resolve the standoff over Tehran’s nuclear programme but US officials say they have Beijing’s support for the sanctions resolution.
Before heading to China, Ahmadinejad was due to hold a round of meetings in Istanbul where he was attending a regional security and confidence building conference on Monday.
He was expected to meet Prime Minister Vladimir Putin of Russia, another Security Council permanent member, media reports said.
He was also due to meet Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to discuss the nuclear fuel swap deal.
On May 17, Turkey and Brazil brokered a deal with under which Iran agreed to ship 1,200 kilogrammes (2,640 pounds) of its low-enriched uranium (LEU) to Turkey in return for high-enriched uranium fuel for the Tehran reactor which would be supplied later by Russia and France.
The deal was cold-shouldered immediately by Washington which has ratcheted up diplomatic pressure for a fourth set of UN sanctions against Iran for continuing to enrich uranium.
The US secretary of state said on Monday that world powers have the required number of votes to pass the sanctions resolution.
Clinton said she expected Iran would “pull some stunt in the next couple of days” to try to head it off.
“I don’t think anybody should be surprised if they try to divert attention once again from the unity within the Security Council,” the top US diplomat said.
Senior US officials have said they are forging ahead with the resolution without Brazil and Turkey, two non-permanent council members who insist that fresh sanctions would be counter-productive after the nuclear fuel deal they brokered opened up the opportunity for further diplomacy.
Asked if she was worried about opposition to the sanctions resolution among non-permanent members, Clinton said: “We’ll wait and see what happens, but we have the votes.”
US officials say the resolution has the support of all five council permanent members — Britain, France, China, Russia and the United States.
For the resolution to pass, Washington will also need the votes of at least four of the 10 non-permanent members.
US officials have said they expect the resolution to be put to the vote later this month.
On Friday, Ahmadinejad said Iran will defend its rights even if new sanctions are imposed.
“We are standing in the face of enemies. To defend the rights of the nation, we will pull out any resolutions from the mouth” of the enemies, the hawk said in a speech marking the 21st anniversary of the death of revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
—Agencies