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“So
far we have succeeded in foiling the U.S. plot,” said Rawhani
(AFP)
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TEHRAN,
March 8 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Iran must be
recognized by the international community as a peaceful nuclear state
and has its nuclear file totally closed, the country’s top national
security official said on Sunday, March 7.
“The
international community has to accept Iran in the world nuclear
club,” Hassan Rawhani, the head of Iran's Supreme National Security
Council, was quoted as saying by Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Speaking
on the eve of a meeting by the board of governors of the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Rawhani said the Islamic republic would
seek to convince the U.N. nuclear watchdog to finish a
13-month probe of its nuclear program.
“We
must arrive at a stage where the [IAEA] board of governors totally
close the file on Iran's peaceful nuclear activities and take this off
the agenda,” he said.
Rawhani,
who has headed Iran’s nuclear negotiations, also asserted that Iran
“has the inalienable right to master its own enrichment cycle”.
The
IAEA board of governors will tackle a progress report on Iran’s
cooperation with the Vienna-based body.
‘U.S.
Plot’
The
high-ranking official said that during the meeting, there was just a
“tiny risk” that Iran could be referred for possible sanctions
from the U.N. Security Council -- a consistent demand by the United
States -- amid continued criticism that the country is failing to live
up to its “pledge of greater transparency”.
“So
far we have succeeded in foiling the U.S. plot, and do not think the
U.S. is in a position to send our dossier to the Security Council,”
Rawhani added.
He
attributed Iran's ability to avoid serious sanction by signing up to
tougher inspections to what he said had been a “national
consensus”. He said this had to continue if Iran was to see its file
closed in Vienna.
He
was referring to Tehran's
agreement late last year to sign the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)
Additional Protocol allowing inspectors to carry out more intrusive,
snap checks of its nuclear facilities.
Reuters
news agency quoted
diplomats on the IAEA's 35-nation board as saying that they were
working a draft IAEA resolution on Iran circulated by the United
States, Canada, New Zealand and Australia.
According
to Reuters, they said it would require some fine-tuning but was
something that could eventually by approved by the entire board.
The
United States accuses Iran of running a secret nuclear program in
violation of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), while in the
meantime turn a blind eye to Israel’s
undeclared nuclear arsenal.
IAEA
chief Mohammad ElBaradei asked Israel to
give up its secret arsenal of nuclear weapons to head off an
arms race in the Middle East.