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Iran security chief holds nuclear talks in Russia
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) Sept 19, 2011

Iran's top national security official arrived in Moscow Monday to discuss with Russia Tehran's nuclear standoff with the West and the two sides' row over an abandoned arms contract.

Saeed Jalili was to hold private talks with Russian officials at the Islamic state's embassy in Moscow before joining a global security forum in the Ural Mountains city of Yekaterinburg later in the week.

Jalili began his visit at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO) where he told a student audience that he wanted Moscow and Tehran to bridge their differences in the face of "unilateral policies" being pursued by Washington.

"Even though Moscow and Tehran disagree on certain issues, they have mutual interests, particularly those in energy," Jalili said.

Iran has been furious with Russia for its decision last year to abandon the agreed sale of S-300 missiles that fell under a sanctions regime imposed by the UN Security Council.

Jalili highlighted the launch this month of the Bushehr nuclear power plant that Russia built for Iran despite criticism from the United States as an example of future conduct for the two traditional allies.

"Iran and Russia ... can turn into the nucleus around which relations on the international arena are built," he said.

Russia had nurtured its ties with Iran through military and other sales in the past decade before becoming far more critical of its nuclear drive in recent months.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has said on several recent occasions that it was up to Iran to prove that its programme had no military dimension -- comments that marked a sharp detour from Russia's previous stance.

Jalili's arrival came one month after Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov held talks in Moscow with his Iranian counterpart Ali Akbar Salehi at which he fleshed out details of a new Kremlin proposal in the standoff.

The plan states that Iran should be rewarded with the step-by-step removal of the UN sanctions each time it builds trust with the global body's nuclear agency by agreeing to inspections and making other compromises.

Lavrov said at the time that Russia's plan had been "completely accepted" by the five other world powers involved in attempts to find a peaceful solution to the Iranian nuclear drive.

The Iranian foreign minister promised to study the idea and called it "promising".

But the Iranian ambassador to Moscow told Iran's ISNA news agency on Sunday that it may take some time for Tehran to formulate an official response.

"Iran needs a great amount of time to present its viewpoints on the proposal so that the two sides can secure a proper result," ambassador Seyyed Mahmoud Reza Sajjadi said.

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US slams Iran at UN atomic agency meet
Vienna (AFP) Sept 19, 2011 - The United States took a renewed swipe at Iran Monday, telling the annual gathering of the UN atomic agency Tehran was creeping "still closer" to producing nuclear weapons-grade uranium.

"Iran has continued to engage in a longstanding pattern of denial, deceit and evasion," US Energy Secretary Steven Chu told the 151-nation International Atomic Energy Association (IAEA) general conference in Vienna.

He said a recent example of Iran's "provocative behaviour" was to begin installing facilities to enrich uranium, which can be used for nuclear power as well as atomic weapons, at an underground facility near Qom.

"Expanding, and moving underground, its enrichment ... marks a significant provocation and brings Iran still closer to having the capacity to produce weapons grade uranium," Chu said, according to the text of his speech.

"Iran's government has a choice: it can comply with its obligations and restore international confidence in the exclusively peaceful nature of its nuclear activities, or it can face deepening isolation and international censure."

The UN Security Council has imposed four rounds of sanctions on Iran over its nuclear activities, which the Islamic republic says are peaceful but which Western powers suspect are aimed at developing atomic weapons.

Iran's atomic chief Fereydoun Abbasi Davani however dismissed Chu's claims.

"The reason we moved to an underground site is that we want to make the Americans and their allies work tougher to destroy it," he told reporters in Vienna.

A report presented to the 35-member IAEA board in Vienna last week said the agency was "increasingly concerned" about a possible military dimension to Iran's nuclear work, about which it "continues to receive new information".

The IAEA's general conference runs to Friday.





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NUKEWARS
US considers emergency hot line with Iran: official
Washington (AFP) Sept 19, 2011
The United States is considering setting up a direct military hotline with Iran after a series of close encounters between US and Iranian forces in the Gulf, a defense official said Monday. Fearing that a misunderstanding could lead to wider conflict, US officials are weighing establishing emergency communications but a final decision is still pending, said the defense official, who spoke o ... read more


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