News

Leaked information from Iran’s nuclear response to the West reveals Tehran’s demands

Publish date: August 25, 2006

Written by: Charles Digges

The United States would have to lift decades-old sanctions against Iran and probably give assurances that it has no plans of regime change in the Islamic republic in order to settle Iran's nuclear dispute with the West, according to leaks of the Iranian nuclear response to the West, the London Guardian newspaper reported.

Iran is demanding firmer guarantees on trade and nuclear supplies, a tighter timetable for implementing agreements and clearer security pledges from the west before it decides whether to freeze its uranium enrichment programme and explore an offer of a new relationship, according to the formal Iranian response on its nuclear activities delivered to the western diplomats last weekend.

Details of the response, disclosed to the Guardian yesterday by two well-connected Iranian political scientists, claimed moderates in Tehran had won an important power struggle and were offering a negotiated settlement of the nuclear dispute.

If Washington spurns the Iranian olive branch and forces through sanctions from the United Nations Security Council, "the stage will be set for a full-scale international crisis", the response’s authors told the paper.

Under the terms of a UN resolution the Iranians have until Thursday, August 31st, to freeze all uranium enrichment activities or face the prospect of western sanctions. The same day the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Mohammed ElBaradei, is slated to tell the Security Council that Iran has not suspended uranium enrichment, the paper said. ElBaradei is also likely to report additional frustrations in the IAEA’s efforts to gain more detail on Iran’s nuclear programmes.

In June the Europeans, the US, Russia and China offered Iran an extensive package of incentives if it enacted a verifiable halt to uranium enrichment, a process that is capable of delivering uranium strong enough for use in nuclear bombs.

But the negotiations on that package – everything from the fine print of Iran-EU trade agreements to a pact on "regional security arrangements" and the details of European supplies of nuclear reactors for a civil nuclear programme – could take at least 10 years, the Guardian reported.

More News

All news

The role of CCS in Germany’s climate toolbox: Bellona Deutschland’s statement in the Association Hearing

After years of inaction, Germany is working on its Carbon Management Strategy to resolve how CCS can play a role in climate action in industry. At the end of February, the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action published first key points and a proposal to amend the law Kohlenstoffdioxid Speicherungsgesetz (KSpG). Bellona Deutschland, who was actively involved in the previous stakeholder dialogue submitted a statement in the association hearing.

Project LNG 2.

Bellona’s new working paper analyzes Russia’s big LNG ambitions the Arctic

In the midst of a global discussion on whether natural gas should be used as a transitional fuel and whether emissions from its extraction, production, transport and use are significantly less than those from other fossil fuels, Russia has developed ambitious plans to increase its own production of liquified natural gas (LNG) in the Arctic – a region with 75% of proven gas reserves in Russia – to raise its share in the international gas trade.