VIENNA,
November 21 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - The U.N. nuclear
watchdog Friday, November 21, approved an additional protocol allowing
wider inspections in Iran, clearing the way for Tehran to sign on to
the new regime.
The
protocol gives the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
inspectors the right to make unannounced visits to suspect sites, even
if the host country has not declared them as open to inspection.
"The
board has approved Iran's additional protocol and now it is ready to
be signed," said Melissa Fleming, spokeswoman for IAEA, according
to Agence France-Presse (AFP).
IAEA
chief Mohamed ElBaradei maintains that wider inspections are crucial
to be able to guarantee that Iran is not secretly producing
nuclear weapons.
Earlier
Friday, ElBaradei told reporters: "I think things are moving but
they need more time. They may not table a resolution before some time
next week."
He
was speaking as the IAEA's 35-nation board of governors began a second
day of talks in Vienna Friday, after a long day Thursday that had
included a short plenary session and then long hours of informal,
closed-door meetings.
The
United States and Europe's big three - Britain, France and Germany -
are clashing in the wording of a resolution over how strongly to come
down on Iran, which Washington accuses of trying to secretly develop
atomic weapons, diplomats said.
The
so-called Euro 3 are pushing for cooperation rather than
confrontation, especially since their Foreign Ministers won
concessions from Iran on October 21 on working with the IAEA in
exchange for a promise not to take the issue to the U.N. Security
Council, according to diplomats.
The
United States, which was not party to this promise, wants to declare
the Islamic Republic in "non-compliance" with the nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), a State Department spokesman said in
Washington Thursday.
"Non-compliance"
is the trigger-word for bringing the issue before the Security
Council, which could impose sanctions.
The
United States "is looking for some pretty strong language and is
willing to compromise only to a point," a Western diplomat said.
"If
we're not going to have an extremely strong resolution, why have a
resolution at all," he said.
Iran
was already showing in Vienna that it linked future cooperation to a
non-threatening resolution.
But
Iran has refused at the IAEA board meeting to set a date for signing
the protocol until its sees what sort of a resolution the board is to
pass on Iranian violations over the past 18 years of NPT safeguards
agreements.
Asked
if this was not a form of blackmail to put pressure towards a weak
resolution, ElBaradei said: "Everybody is trying to use whatever
assets they have to try to negotiate."
Iranian
Foreign Minister Kamal Kharazi said in Tehran Thursday that if EU
countries fail to prevent Iran from being declared in non-compliance,
Tehran will abandon commitments made to the IAEA.
"We
must wait until tomorrow (Friday) to see if the Americans have
succeeded in their attempts," Kharazi said, quoted by Iran's IRNA
news agency.
ElBaradei
said Thursday that Iran must be cited for violating nuclear
non-proliferation agreements but must also receive credit for turning
a new page.
The
IAEA head last week reported Iranian breaches in compliance during 18
years of hidden nuclear activities, including making small amounts of
plutonium and enriched uranium, which can be materials for making the
bomb.
But
ElBaradei said in the report there was as yet no proof that Iran was
secretly trying to make nuclear weapons, something Washington said was
"simply impossible to believe."
A
key sticking point in the Euro 3's draft resolution is its saying that
if Iran continues to cooperate, the issue of its compliance should
stay with the IAEA.
The
text says that should ElBaradei "report that there have been
further significant failures, the board of governors would meet
immediately and decide upon measures to be taken," according to a
copy shown to reporters.
A
diplomat said this formulation, however, was not enough since the term
"significant failures" was vague.
"A
failure is a failure," the diplomat said, stressing that the
resolution should also unambiguously say when the matter would go to
the Security Council.
Brazen
Breaches
Meanwhile,
the U.S. ambassador to the IAEA charged Friday that Iran has brazenly
and systematically violated its nuclear non-proliferation obligations.
"Iran's
breaches of its obligations have been brazen and systematic and far
from merely 'technical' ones," Ken Brill told the board of
governors meeting of the IAEA in Vienna.
Brill
said that Iran could not be seen as "a state that tried in good
faith to meet its (safeguards) obligations" under the nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty, even if it was now ready to cooperate after
violations.
Brill
further added that the report "makes unequivocally clear that
Iran chose, as a matter of government policy sustained for well over a
decade, to violate its safeguards obligations in full knowledge that
its actions and omissions were violations.
"Indeed,
when the truth about its secret nuclear program first began to come
out, Iran immediately adopted and implemented a cynical strategy of
further denial, delay and deception."
ElBaradei
said the IAEA has no "evidence," however, that Iran is
developing nuclear weapons, with investigations continuing.
But
Brill said there clearly was evidence, but no "proof", and
that ElBaradei's comment had been misinterpreted.
Brill
said Iran was now "asking us to pass over its record of deception
on the strength of today's bare assurances that now it is telling the
truth.
"No
serious observer of Iran's record can accept that argument," he
added.
The
additional protocol to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) was
created in 1997 after the IAEA discovered that previous inspections
had not been broad enough to uncover hidden nuclear activities in
Iraq.
Iran
promised on October 21 in an agreement with Britain, France and
Germany to sign the additional protocol and delivered a letter
formalizing this promise on November 10 to ElBaradei.