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Iran further isolated after British embassy storming
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) Dec 2, 2011

UN sanctions against Iran 'exhausted': Russia envoy
United Nations (AFP) Dec 2, 2011 - Russia believes new UN sanctions against Iran's nuclear program are no longer possible, Moscow's UN envoy said Friday condemning "threats" being made against Tehran and Syria by the West.

"We believe that the sanctions track in the Security Council has been exhausted," ambassador Vitaly Churkin told a press conference when asked about possible action against Iran.

"We continue to believe very strongly that negotiations should continue with Iran."

The European Union and United States have both ordered new sanctions against Iran after International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) report said there were "credible" signs of military dimensions to Iran's nuclear drive.

Russia was "upset" with the report, Churkin said, adding the IAEA analysis had been "played up more as a PR exercise than a serious nuclear effort."

Russia has signed up so far to four rounds of UN Security Council sanctions against Iran's nuclear and missile programs. Russia and China have made it known however that they oppose new measures.

But Churkin said "we believe that the negotiated track can be resumed" and his country had made repeated attempts to get contacts restarted between Iran and the international group on the nuclear showdown: Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States.

The envoy said the West had to pull back from confrontation with Iran and Syria.

"The confrontation scenario is being played out not only with regard to Syria but with regard to Iran as well. All those threats and insinuations of possible military action against Iran, they don't help at all."

Western diplomats say that despite the IAEA report on Iran it could take months to get talk of new action in the Security Council. Russia and China vetoed a European resolution in October condemning the Syrian government's crackdown on opposition protests.


The storming of Britain's embassy in Tehran this week will likely deepen the isolation of Iran, which is already criticised for its nuclear programme, human rights record and alleged support for militants.

Britain on Wednesday ordered Iran's embassy in London closed after Basij militia members ran amok through its own mission in Tehran, prompting the evacuation of all its diplomats.

Several European nations, including France, Germany and Italy, recalled their ambassadors in a show of solidarity, and the European Union on Thursday declared it would take "appropriate measures" to hit back at what it saw as an attack on the EU as a whole.

"The live TV images of this assault clearly organised by the regime provoked a shock that will weigh for a long time on the already bad relations between Tehran and the Europeans," said one EU ambassador who declined to be identified because of the diplomatic tensions.

The new crisis has erupted as Iran struggles with severe international sanctions already in place over its controversial nuclear programme, which has been condemned by the UN Security Council.

The United States and the European Union this week announced a hardening of their economic and financial measures against Iran, following a November report by the UN nuclear watchdog expressing "serious concerns" about a possible military dimension to the programme, which Tehran has denied.

The sanctions, which are starting to be felt in the oil sector -- which accounts for 80% of foreign revenues for Iran, the second-biggest exporter in the OPEC producers' cartel -- could be extended to its central bank and even see an embargo on oil sales.

Western nations have also exerted pressure over Iran's human rights record, since severe repression against dissidents and protesters following the disputed re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2009.

A UN special rapporteur tasked with looking into the issue has filed a series of critical reports which a furious Tehran has slammed as politically biased.

Iranian support for opposition demonstrations led by its co-religionists among the Shiite majority in Bahrain has also reignited tensions between Tehran and its Sunni-ruled Gulf Arab neighbours -- chief among them Saudi Arabia, which has accused Iran of "meddling".

The parlous relations with Saudi Arabia were worsened in October, when the United States implicated Iranian officials in an alleged plot to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to Washington -- another accusation Iran denies.

"The degradation of ties with Saudis is long-lasting and could totally wipe out the Iranians' hope of closer relations with the Arab world after the recent regime changes seen in several countries," one Arab diplomat in Tehran said soon after the US plot allegation came to light.

Iran's isolation could also grow if the regime in Syria -- Tehran's main regional ally -- is toppled by the persistent protests there.

The loss of Syria would complicate Iran's access to other allies -- the Hezbollah militia in Lebanon, and Hamas in the Palestinian territories. It would also diminish Iran's influence in the region, several European and Arab diplomats predicted.

The issue of Syria also has an effect on Iran relations with Turkey, which has taken a firm position in favour of regime change in Damascus.

Ties with Ankara, which Tehran has made a priority in a bid to get around Western sanctions, have been jeopardised by the recent installation in Turkey of a NATO anti-missile shield which is expressly designed to counter an Iranian threat.

Officials in Iran -- notably within its powerful Revolutionary Guards -- have gone so far as to warn that NATO facilities in Turkey could be attacked, prompting worries in Ankara.

Even relations with Russia and China -- two permanent UN Security Council members that have been resisting Western efforts to totally isolate Iran over its nuclear programme -- are not immune from tensions.

Tehran is unhappy with Moscow for previously voting against Iran in the United Nations, for cancelling a sale of anti-aircraft missiles, and for repeated delays in Russia's project to help build Iran's nuclear power plant in Bushehr.

China, which has become Iran's principal trade partner in the vacuum left by the departure of Western firms, has in recent months also been the subject of complaints from Iran for dragging its feet on promises to invest 40 billion dollars in oil and gas projects.

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Iraq blast was assassination attempt says official
Baghdad (AFP) Dec 2, 2011 - Iraqi Major General Qassim Atta on Friday said an explosion near parliament was a botched attempt to kill the prime minister, after an official termed it an attempt on the parliament speaker's life.

At least one person was killed and two wounded in the blast near the Iraqi parliament building on Monday, the cause of which was disputed. MP Muayid al-Tayyeb was one of those hurt.

"The intelligence information that we obtained showed that this operation was conducted to target the prime minister," Baghdad security spokesman Atta told AFP.

"The person was supposed to bring the car inside the parliament parking, and leave it there for four days until (Prime Minister Nuri) al-Maliki attended a session of the parliament," Atta said.

"He failed to bring the car inside the parking, so he blew himself up," he said, adding that "the car entered the Green Zone with a convoy."

"We arrested two groups involved in this operation," Atta said.

He told a news conference on Friday that the vehicle was a black SUV containing 20 kilogrammes of locally-made explosives.

A burned body has been found at the scene was suspected of being the body of the "terrorist," he said.

Iraqi security officials, an MP and a US military spokesman had on Monday given a laundry list of potential causes for the blast, saying that it was alternatively from a mortar shell, a suicide bomber, or a magnetic "sticky bomb."

Atta is the second official to allege that the blast was an attempt on a high-ranking Iraqi politician's life.

Aidan Helmi, media adviser to parliament speaker Osama al-Nujaifi, said on Monday that the explosion was caused by a suicide bomber and called it a botched "assassination attempt" on Nujaifi.

"One man in a black vehicle that looks like the vehicles of Nujaifi's convoy tried to enter the VIP gate of parliament," possibly aiming to join the speaker's convoy, Helmi told AFP.

"When he tried to enter, the guards asked him for a special badge, so he backed up, hitting a car behind him and the pavement.

"He then got out of the car and started arguing with the driver of the car behind him, and suddenly he blew himself up."

"Mr Nujaifi was in his room, and he was late because I talked to him for 15 minutes," Helmi said.

"This is an assassination attempt against Mr Nujaifi. The question is not which party the attacker belonged to, but rather how he managed to arrive here with this vest."



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United US Senate adopts tough Iran sanctions
Washington (AFP) Dec 1, 2011
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