اهداف جامعه ایرانی چیست؟ « ما چگونه فکر می کنیم» و آنچه که در ایران مهم انگاشته می شود.

۱۳۸۶ اردیبهشت ۲۵, سه‌شنبه

We must attack Iran before it gets the bomb

By Toby Harnden in Washington
16/05/2007


Iran should be attacked before it develops nuclear weapons, America's former ambassador to the United Nations said yesterday.

Former US ambassador to the UN John Bolton said Iran should be attacked before it develops nuclear weapons John Bolton has close links to the Bush administration

John Bolton, who still has close links to the Bush administration, told The Daily Telegraph that the European Union had to "get more serious" about Iran and recognise that its diplomatic attempts to halt Iran's enrichment programme had failed.

Iran has "clearly mastered the enrichment technology now...they're not stopping, they're making progress and our time is limited", he said. Economic sanctions "with pain" had to be the next step, followed by attempting to overthrow the theocratic regime and, ultimately, military action to destroy nuclear sites.

Mr Bolton's stark warning appeared to be borne out yesterday by leaks about an inspection by the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) of Iran's main nuclear installation at Natanz on Sunday.

The experts found that Iran's scientists were operating 1,312 centrifuges, the machines used to enrich uranium. If Iran can install 3,000, it will need about one year to produce enough weapons grade uranium for one nuclear bomb.

Experts had judged that Iran would need perhaps two years to master the technical feat of enriching uranium using centrifuges - and then another two years to produce enough material to build a weapon.

But the IAEA found that Iran has already managed to enrich uranium to the four per cent purity needed for power stations. Weapons-grade uranium must reach a threshold of 84 per cent purity.

Mohammed ElBaradei, the IAEA's head, said the West's goal of halting the enrichment programme had been "overtaken by events". Iran had probably mastered this process and "the focus now should be to stop them from going to industrial scale production".

Mr Bolton said: "It's been conclusively proven Iran is not going to be talked out of its nuclear programme. So to stop them from doing it, we have to massively increase the pressure.

"If we can't get enough other countries to come along with us to do that, then we've got to go with regime change by bolstering opposition groups and the like, because that's the circumstance most likely for an Iranian government to decide that it's safer not to pursue nuclear weapons than to continue to do so. And if all else fails, if the choice is between a nuclear-capable Iran and the use of force, then I think we need to look at the use of force."

President George W Bush privately refers to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who has pledged to wipe Israel "off the map", as a 21st Century Adolf Hitler and Mr Bolton, who remains a close ally of Vice President Dick Cheney, said the Iranian leader presented a similar threat.

"If the choice is them continuing [towards a nuclear bomb] or the use of force, I think you're at a Hitler marching into the Rhineland point. If you don't stop it then, the future is in his hands, not in your hands, just as the future decisions on their nuclear programme would be in Iran's hands, not ours."

But Mr Bolton conceded that military action had many disadvantages and might not succeed. "It's very risky for the price of oil, risky because you could, let's say, take out their enrichment capabilities at Natanz, and they may have enrichment capabilities elsewhere you don't know about."

Such a strike would only be a "last option" after economic sanctions and attempts to foment a popular revolution had failed but the risks of using military force, he indicated, would be less than those of tolerating a nuclear Iran. "Imagine what it would be like with a nuclear Iran. Imagine the influence Iran could have over the entire region. It's already pushing its influence in Iraq through the financing of terrorist groups like Hamas and Hizbollah."

Although he praised Tony Blair for his support of America over the Iraq war, he criticised the Prime Minister, who is due to visit Washington today to bid farewell to Mr Bush, for persisting with supporting EU attempts to negotiate with Iran that were "doomed to fail".

"Blair just didn't focus on it as much as [Jack] Straw [former Foreign Secretary] did, and it was very much a Foreign Office thing because they wanted to show their European credentials, wanted to work with the Germans and the French to show 'we'll solve Iran in a way differently than those cowboy Americans solved Iraq'."

Mr Bolton, a leading advocate of the Iraq war, insisted that it had been right to overthrow Saddam Hussein and that the later failures did not mean that military action against rogue states should not be contemplated again.

"The regime itself was the threat and we dealt with the threat. Now, what we did after that didn't work out so well. That doesn't say to me, therefore you don't take out regimes that are problematic.

"It says, in the case of Iraq, and a lot of this I have to say we've learned through the benefit of hindsight, was that we should've given responsibility back to Iraqis more quickly."

The Bush administration has moved some distance away from the hawkish views of Mr Bolton and Mr Cheney, which were dominant in the president's first term, towards the more traditional diplomatic approach favoured by the State Department.

But his is still a highly influential voice and Mr Bush remains adamant that he will not allow Iran to become armed with nuclear weapons.

The Pentagon has drawn up contingency plans for military action and some senior White House officials share Mr Bolton's thinking.

Leader urges scientific research

Tue, 15 May 2007

The Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has praised the role of universities as an element in a nation-wide scientific movement.


Ayatollah Khamenei said universities have a key role in brightening the future of the country, adding, "A key element to protect our national identity, independence and dignity is to view research-based work seriously and follow scientific projects with a strong will and organized program."

"The literature of international relations is based on power and the power of any country is rooted in the scientific capability of that country," the Leader said, in an address to a gathering of academics at Mashad Ferdowsi University on Tuesday.

The Leader of the Islamic Revolution praised the institution of the university as a principal element in Iran's national movement toward scientific achievements.

The Leader also emphasized Iran's need for comprehensive planning and said, "This plan should determine the scientific priorities of our society."

Ayatollah Khamenei said research was critical to academic centers and called on the government and the Minister of Sciences, Research and Technology to allocate a sufficient budget for research-based activities.

Ayatollah Khamenei is on a three-day visit to the holy city of Mashad

Egypt welcomes Ahmadinejad's remarks


Tue, 15 May 2007

Egypt has welcomed the remarks made by the Iranian President expressing Tehran's willingness to restore full diplomatic ties with Cairo.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit on Tuesday told the state run news agency MENA that he would discuss the matter with his Iranian counterpart Manouchehr Mottaki.

Aboul Gheit made the remarks in Pakistan where he is attending the 34th meeting of the Organization of Islamic Conference.

On Monday, President Ahmadinejad told reporters during his visit to the United Arab Emirates that Iran is looking forward to having full diplomatic relations with Egypt.

Ahmadinejad also said the rapprochement betwee

India says IPI feasible

Tue, 15 May 2007

Indian Minister Dinsha Patel says the Iran-Pakistan-India Gas Transfer Pipeline Project - the Peace Pipeline - is technically viable.

India's Minister of State for Petroleum and Natural Gas Dinsha Patel added, "The economic feasibility of the plan (for India) depends on the gas price suggested by Iran."

"The three countries intend to sign an agreement on the issue by the end of June," the official said.

"India has selected Ernst & Young as the financial consultant and the British ILF as the technical consultant for the preparation of a pre-feasibility report of the pipeline," he added.

"Iran has provided a formula for determining the gas price at the Iran-Pakistan border. New Delhi is discussing transportation tariffs and transit fees that must be paid to Pakistan for passage of the pipeline through its territory," he said.

Patel refused to comment on Iran's proposed price for export.

Some Indian officials say Tehran wants to sell natural gas to India and Pakistan at $4.93 per million BTUs, or $60 per barrel crude oil price. Transportation tariffs and transit fees would be added to this price.

The tripartite pipeline is proposed to be a 2,775 kilometer gas pipeline project that would deliver natural gas from Iran to Pakistan and India. The project is expected to take three to five years to complete and would cost $7 billion.

Lara Fabian I will love you again

كيهان مقامات دولتي مذاكره كننده با آمريكا را «ساده لوح» می خواند

سكوت كيهان در برابر طرح احمدي نژاد براي برقراري ارتباط يك روزه با مصر

روزنامه كيهان امروز بدون اشاره به سخنان روزگذشته دكتر احمدي نژاد مبني بر آمادگي ايران براي برقراري ارتباط كامل با مصر - در عرض يك روز - اين بار مذاكره كنندگان با آمريكا را ساده لوح خواند.

به گزارش ايرانيوز در ستون گفت و شنود امروز اين روزنامه(كه نگارشي طنز دارد) آمده است :

گفت: چرا برخي از مسئولان كشورمان «ساده لوحي» مي كنند و قصد مذاكره با آمريكا را دارند؟

گفتم: چطور مگه؟

گفت: هنوز هم آمريكايي ها دارند براي ايران شاخ و شونه مي كشند و مي گويند منظور ما از مذاكره آن است كه ايران را تشويق كنيم در عراق نقش سازنده داشته باشد!

گفتم: آمريكا كه عراق را اشغال نظامي كرده، از تروريست هاي عراقي حمايت مي كند و در انفجارهاي عراق آشكارا دخالت دارد بايد دست از شرارت بردارد نه اينكه...

گفت: ولي با اينهمه كينه توزي علني و زورگويي آمريكايي ها معلوم نيست چرا برخي مسئولان ما فكر مي كنند لحن آمريكا ملايم تر شده است؟!

گفتم: چه عرض كنم؟! معلمي از دانش آموزي پرسيد كدام حيوان به انسان علاقه بيشتري دارد و دانش آموز جواب داد؛ آقا اجازه!... گرگ گرسنه!

اين روزنامه همچنين در كاريكاتور روز خود نيز موضوع مذاكره ايران و آمريكا را كه رسما از جانب دولت تاييد شده را به نقد كشيده است.

لازم به ذكر است كه اين روزنامه عليرغم مواضع تند پيشين در خصوص طرح هاي برقراري ارتباط با مصر - از هرگونه موضع گيري در خصوص سخنان روزگذشته دكتر احمدي نژاد مبني بر آمادگي ايران براي برقراري ارتباط كامل با مصر - آن هم در عرض يك روز - خودداري كرد.

سخنان روز گذشته رييس دولت نهم خطاب به خبرنگار الاهرام عنوان اول اكثر رسانه هاي امروز ايران بود

فردا ظهر، تجمع دانشجويان مقابل دفتر رئيس‌جمهور


جنبش عدالتخواه دانشجويي با صدور بيانيه‌اي عليه مذاكره با آمريكا، از دانشجويان براي حضور در تجمع ظهر فردا مقابل دفتر رئيس‌جمهور دعوت كرد.

در اين بيانيه آمده است:
حكومتي كه اين طور صريحا مي‌گويد مي‌خواهم عليه نظام اسلامي و خواست ملت ايران عمل كنم و براي براندازي اين نظام بودجه مي‌گذارد، ارتباط و مذاكره با آن هم خيانت و هم حماقت است.
مقام معظم رهبري (1/3/1381)

مقدمه
در روزهاي اخير سلسله نرمش‌هاي تدريجي دولت و سکوت تامل برانگيز افکار عمومي به اعلام خبر پذيرش مذاکره رسمي ايران و آمريکا بر سر موضوع عراق منتهي شد.

خبر سفر پلوسي به ايران، مذاکره غير رسمي نماينده سازمان ملل در آمريکا، حضور در اجلاس شرم الشيخ و سخنان رئيس‌جمهور‌ مبني بر آمادگي مذاکره با همه کشورهاي جهان به جز رژيم صهيونيستي بخشي از گامهاي قبلي اين حرکت شرم آور بوده است.

امروز نسبت به اصل مذاکره با شيطان بزرگ، محتوا، چگونگي و نتايج آن سؤالات و ابهامات متعددي وجود دارد که جنبش عدالتخواه دانشجويي قبلا نيز در بيانيه‌هاي تحليلي به آن پرداخته و بواسطه حساسيت موضوع يک بار ديگر در بيانيه فعلي بر آن تاکيد مي‌نمايد :

مخالفت با مذاكره؛ آمريكا هيچ تغييري نكرده است
بناي عدم مذاکره با آمريکا تا کنون به دليل خوي استکباري و استعماري اين کشور، خصومت رسمي شيطان بزرگ با انقلاب اسلامي و آرمان‌هاي آن؛ ظلم به ملتهاي مستضعف عالم و ... بوده است. تا کنون هدف آمريکا از مذاکره تحميل شرايط خود بر جمهوري اسلامي و وادار کردن ملت ايران به عدول از آرمان‌هاي انقلاب اسلامي نظير بيداري اسلامي، ظلم ستيزي، حمايت از مظلومان عالم و جنبشهاي مقاومت جهاني و... بوده است.

در تحليل شرايط فعلي و نوع نگاه اين شيطان بزرگ به انقلاب اسلامي در مي‌يابيم كه ايالات متحده همچنان نگاهي خصمانه و كينه توزانه نسبت به ما دارد. در هفته گذشته بودجه‌هاي ميلياردي براي كمك به براندازي جمهوري اسلامي تصويب مي‌شود؛ تحريمهاي آمريكا عليه ما همچنان برقرار است؛ ايران همچنان متهم به نقض حقوق بشر و تروريسم مي‌گردد؛ ما را همچنان محور شرارت مي‌خوانند؛ ديپلماتهاي ما همچنان در بند آمريكا هستند و حتي ما را تهديد به حمله نظامي مي‌نمايد به طوري كه رئيس‌جمهور اسلامي ايران در برابر اين تهديد موضع گيري مي‌نمايد و .... در كلامي مختصر همچنان روابط ايران و آمريكا گرگ و ميش است و هيچ تغييري در مواضع طرف مقابل بوجود نيامده است لذا اين شائبه مطرح مي‌شود كه آيا نوع نگاه ما و مواضع ما در استكبارستيزي تغيير كرده است؟ آيا قرار است ما از اصول و آرمان‌ها انقلاب برگرديم؟ مگر خميني كبير ـ رحمة الله عليه ـ نفرموده بود كه «ما تا آخر ايستاده‌ايم و با امريکا‌ روابط ايجاد نخواهيم کرد، مگر اين که آدم بشود و از ظلم کردن دست بردارد و از آن طرف دنيا نيايد در لبنان، و نخواهد دستش را به طرف خليج فارس دراز کند». (6/8/1363)؟ آيا به همين سادگي مباني انقلابي حضرت امام خميني ـ رضوان الله تعالي ـ را فراموش كرده‌ايم‌؟

براي شناختن مقصر نا‌امني، نيازي به مذاكره نيست
اين روزها مسئولان‌ سياست خارجي مدعي آنند كه مذاكرات با موضوعيت عراق و براي كمك به امنيت عراق برگزار مي‌شود.

سؤال دانشجويان عدالتخواه اين است مگر جز حضور اشغالگران علتي براي ناامني هم وجود دارد؟‌ آيا براي فهماندن اين نكته به آمريكايي‌ها كه بايستي از عراق خارج شوند نياز به مذاكره است؟‌ آيا دولت عراق نمي بايست براي نشان دادن حسن نيت آمريكا را مجبور به آزادي ديپلمات‌هاي ايران مي‌نمود؟ دولت آمريكا حتي اجازه ملاقات نمايندگان كشورمان با ديپلماتهاي در بند را نداده است و ما مي‌خواهيم با آنان در مسئله عراق مذاكره نماييم؟‌

آيا مذاكره بر سر امنيت عراق منجر به تقويت اتهام دخالت ايران در ناامني‌هاي عراق نخواهد شد؟‌ مگر كدامين حلقه ناامني به دست ما ايجاد شده و يا كدامين علت ناامني را ما مي‌توانيم رفع نماييم؟

آيا قرار است ما ناجي آمريكا از ويتنام عراق باشيم؟
در شرايطي كه دولت آمريكا از سوي افكار عمومي آن كشور به خاطر حضور نظامي در عراق و شكست پي در پي طرحهايش تحت فشار است و كنگره آن كشور خواستار خروج از عراق مي‌باشد؛ اين سؤال پيش مي‌آيد كه آيا مذاکره فعلي براي کمک به دولت آمريکا در اين راستاست و يا کمک به ملت عراق؟ آيا آمريكا به دنبال اين است كه از جمهوري اسلامي براي بيرون آمدن مسالمت آميز و كم هزينه ‌از باتلاق عراق استفاده نمايد؟ آيا ما قرار است فرشته نجات امريكا از ويتنام عراق باشيم و دهها سؤال بي پاسخ ديگر؟

از دست دادن نقطه ثقل آزاديخواهان جهان ؛‌ پاسخ مستضعفين عالم را چه خواهيم داد؟‌
همه ما مي‌دانيم كه عزت روزافزون جمهوري اسلامي در ميان ملت‌هاي مستضعف عالم در شرق و غرب مرهون آرمان سازش ناپذير خميني كبير ـ رحمة الله عليه ـ مي‌باشد و ايران تبديل به نقطه ثقل نهضت‌هاي آزادي بخش عالم شده است و همه ملتهاي مظلوم عالم و زخم خوردگان تازيانه‌هاي استعمار و استكبار امروز چشم اميد به عملكرد جمهوري اسلامي و تداوم ايستادگي 28 ساله ما در برابر امريكا دوخته‌اند . اين گونه است كه هرگونه مذاكره كه در آن رعايت اصول عزت، حمكت و مصلحت مورد ترديد قرار گيرد نه تنها كوتاهي از آرمان‌هاي انقلاب محسوب شده كه به تضعيف جبهه مبارزان آزاديخواه عالم منجر مي‌گردد.

حال اگر مسئولان كشور معتقدند كه ما از موضع قدرت مذاكره مي‌نماييم بايستي علاوه بر پاسخگويي به سؤالات طرح شده ادعاي خود را به گوش همه آزاديخواهان عالم برسانند و به روشني براي جهانيان اثبات نمايند كه اين مذاكره نتيجه ي ضعف و سرافكندگي آمريكايي است. امري كه تا كنون محقق نشده است و بعيد به نظر مي‌رسد كه دستگاه ضعيف ديپلماسي ايران بتواند چنين امر مهمي را براي جهانيان خصوصا مستضعفان عالم تبيين نمايد.

تجربه كشورهاي ديگر درس آموز است!
تجربه كشورهايي كه پس از سال‌ها مقاومت در برابر زياده خواهي‌هاي آمريكا، در نهايت پشت يك ميز نشسته‌اند و الزامات طرح شده از سوي دولت ايالات متحده آمريكا را پذيرفته‌اند چه ميزان مورد مطالعه قرار گرفته است و اساسا اين كشورها چه ميزان به موفقيت و عزت بيشتر دست يافته‌اند؟‌تجربه تاريخي نشان داده است كه تمام كشورهاي مقاوم و آزاده با پذيرش عزت و استقلال خويش از دست داده‌اند.
انتقاد شديد از مرعوبان غربزده و وابسته كشور؛ از شادي برخي‌ها بايد شك كرد!

شادي بيش از وصف برخي گروهها و جريانات سياسي پس از طرح اين مسئله قابل پيش بيني بود. اين دسته نه از موافقان دولت كه از منتقدين و بعضا مخربين بي اخلاق دولت نهم بوده‌اند. شادي ايشان از درستي تصميم دولت نيست بلكه از فتح بابي است كه تا كنون بواسطه پايبندي به اصول انقلاب بسته مانده بود. ايشان اميدي ضعيف را ديده‌اند تا بلكه به آرزوي ديرينه خويش در بازگشت آمريكا كه خود ناشي از ترس است، دست يابند. همان كساني كه ريشه همه مشكلات كشور را در دوري از آمريكا مي‌دانند!

به راستي آيا دولت نهم نبايد از شادي اين دسته كه هيچ نسبت ايدئولويك با دولت ندارند شك نمايد؟‌
رئيس‌جمهور تعارض ميان قول و فعل خود را چگونه پاسخ مي‌دهد؟‌

تعارض ميان مواضع و شعارهاي انقلابي رئيس‌جمهور و عملكرد دستگاه سياست خارجي و برخي ديگر از مواضع ايشان بيش از پيش موجب تعجب و شگفتي است. رئيس‌جمهور از يك سو سخن از عدم سازش فرزندان خميني رحمه الله به ميان مي‌آورد و از سوي ديگر آمادگي دولت براي مذاكره با همه كشورها به جز رژيم صهيونيستي اعلام مي‌نمايد. دشمن خونخوار نظام اسلامي ما را تهديد به حمله نظامي مي‌كند و رئيس‌جمهور تاكيد مي‌كند كه هر تهديدي را با قاطعيت پاسخ خواهيم داد اما وزارت خارجه خبر مذاكره با آمريكا را اعلام مي‌نمايد ! براستي اين تعارض‌ها چگونه توجيه مي‌شود؟

آيا اين تعارض، منجر به از دست رفتن نتايج تلاش‌هاي ديپلماسي فعال دولت نهم در تشكيل جبهه مقاومت جهاني در برابر استكبار نمي شود؟‌ چگونه شكاف در چنين جبهه اي را پاسخ مي‌دهيد؟‌

سكوت؛ نقطه تاريك جنبش دانشجويي
متاسفانه در اين ميان سكوت جامعه انقلابي و تشكلهاي دانشجويي كشور با توجيهاتي نظير شعارهاي اسلامي و انقلابي دولت نهم، عوض شدن شرايط، همسو بودن نهادهاي كشور، احتمال هماهنگي با رهبري و ... منجر به طي شدن گامهاي تدريجي عقب نشيني از اصول انقلاب اسلامي شده است.
عدم مطالبه، توجيه گري و فقدان آرمانخواهي جنبش دانشجويي كه در تاريخ خود برگ‌هاي زريني در استكبارستيزي دارد نيز مزيد بر اين علت شد. حال آنكه مقام معظم رهبري بارها دانشجويان را از مصلحت‌انديشي برحذر داشته و آنها را به آرمانگرايي فراخوانده‌اند. مواضع ايشان در قبال اعتراضات دانشجويي به مذاكرات هسته اي سال 82 در تهران مبني بر ضرورت آرمانگرايي دانشجويان تنها نمونه اي از اين مسئله است.

فردا بعد از ظهر؛ تجمع در مقابل دفتر رياست جمهوري
بر اساس آنچه كه گفته شد جنبش عدالتخواه دانشجويي براي اعلام اعتراض به پذيرش مذاكره با آمريكا و مطالبه پاسخ سؤالات طرح شده تجمعي را در روز چهارشنبه 26/2/1386 ساعت 13:30 لغايت 15 در مقابل دفتر رياست جمهوري واقع در انتهاي خيابان پاستور برگزار مي‌نمايد.

اللهم ثبت قلوبنا علي دينك
جنبش عدالتخواه دانشجويي

Inspectors Cite Big Gain by Iran on Nuclear Fuel

United Nations inspectors found 1,300 centrifuges running smoothly at the Natanz nuclear plant on Sunday, having overcome previous problems.


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Published: May 15, 2007

VIENNA, May 14 — Inspectors for the International Atomic Energy Agency have concluded that Iran appears to have solved most of its technological problems and is now beginning to enrich uranium on a far larger scale than before, according to the agency’s top officials.

The findings may change the calculus of diplomacy in Europe and in Washington, which has aimed to force a suspension of Iran’s enrichment activities in large part to prevent it from learning how to produce weapons-grade material.

In a short-notice inspection of Iran’s main nuclear facility at Natanz on Sunday, conducted in advance of a report to the United Nations Security Council due early next week, the inspectors found that Iranian engineers were already using roughly 1,300 centrifuges and were producing fuel suitable for nuclear reactors, according to diplomats and nuclear experts here. Until recently, the Iranians were having difficulty keeping the delicate centrifuges spinning at the tremendous speeds necessary to make nuclear fuel, and often were running them empty, or not at all.

Now, those roadblocks appear to have been surmounted. “We believe they pretty much have the knowledge about how to enrich,” said Mohamed ElBaradei, the director general of the energy agency, who clashed with the Bush administration four years ago when he declared that there was no evidence that Iraq had resumed its nuclear program. “From now on, it is simply a question of perfecting that knowledge. People will not like to hear it, but that’s a fact.”

It is unclear whether Iran can sustain its recent progress. Major setbacks are common in uranium enrichment, and experts say it is entirely possible that miscalculation, equipment failures or sabotage could prevent the Iranian government from reaching its goal of producing fuel on what President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad boasts is “an industrial scale.”

The material produced so far would have to undergo further enrichment before it could be transformed into bomb-grade material, and to accomplish that Iran would probably have to evict the I.A.E.A. inspectors, as North Korea did four years ago.

Even then it is unclear whether the Iranians would have the technology to produce a weapon small enough to fit atop their missiles, a significant engineering challenge.

Iran says its nuclear program is intended to produce energy, not weapons.

While the United Nations Security Council has passed a resolution demanding that Iran suspend all of its nuclear activities, and twice imposed sanctions for its refusal to do so, some European nations, and particularly Russia, have questioned whether the demand for suspension still makes sense.

The logic of demanding suspension was that it would delay the day that Iran gained the knowledge to produce its own nuclear fuel, what the Israelis used to refer to as “the point of no return.” Those favoring unconditional engagement with Iran have argued that the current strategy was creating a stalemate that the Iranians are exploiting, allowing them to make technological leaps while the Security Council steps up sanctions.

The Bush administration, in contrast, has argued that it will never negotiate while the Iranians speed ever closer to nuclear-weapons capacity, saying there has to be a standstill as long as talks proceed. In a telephone interview, R. Nicholas Burns, the undersecretary of state for policy, who is carrying out the Iran strategy, said that while he had not heard about the I.A.E.A.’s newest findings they would not affect American policy.

“We’re proceeding under the assumption that there is still time for diplomacy to work,” he said, though he added that if the Iranians did not agree to suspend production by the time the leaders of the largest industrial nations meet next month, “we will move ahead toward a third set of sanctions.”

Dr. ElBaradei has always been skeptical of that strategy, telling European foreign ministers that he doubted the Iranians would fully suspend their nuclear activities, and that a face-saving way must be found to resolve the impasse.

“Quite clearly suspension is a requirement by the Security Council, and I would hope the Iranians would listen to the world community,” he said. “But from a proliferation perspective, the fact of the matter is that one of the purposes of suspension — keeping them from getting the knowledge — has been overtaken by events. The focus now should be to stop them from going to industrial scale production, to allow us to do a full-court-press inspection and to be sure they remain inside the treaty.”

The report to the Security Council next week is expected to say that since February 2006, when the Iranians stopped complying with an agreement on broad inspections around the country by the agency, the I.A.E.A.’s understanding of “the scope and content” of Iran’s nuclear activities has deteriorated.

Inspectors are concerned that Iran has declined to answer a series of questions, posed more than a year ago, about information Iran probably received from Abdul Qadeer Khan, the Pakistani nuclear engineer. Of particular interest is a document that shows how to make uranium into spheres, a shape suitable for use in a weapon.

The inspection conducted on Sunday took place on two hours’ notice, a period so short that it appears unlikely that the Iranians could have turned on their centrifuges to impress the inspectors. According to diplomats familiar with the inspectors’ report, in addition to 1,300 working centrifuges, 300 more were being tested and appeared ready to be fed raw nuclear fuel as soon as late this week, the diplomats said. Another 300 were reported to be under construction.

The I.A.E.A. reported more than a week ago that approximately 1,300 centrifuges were in place, but nuclear experts here said that what struck them now was that all the centrifuges appeared to be enriching uranium and running smoothly.

“They are at the stage where they are doing one cascade a week,” said one diplomat familiar with the analysis of Iran’s activities, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the delicacy of the information. A cascade has 164 centrifuges, and experts say that at this pace, Iran could have 3,000 centrifuges operating by June — enough, if the uranium were enriched further, to make one bomb’s worth of nuclear material every year. Tehran may, the diplomat said, be able to build an additional 5,000 centrifuges by the end of the year, for a total of 8,000.

The inspectors have tested the output and concluded that Iran is producing reactor-grade uranium, enriched to a little less than 5 percent purity. But that still worries American officials and I.A.E.A. experts. If Iran stores the uranium and later runs it through centrifuges for four or five more months, it can raise the enrichment to 90 percent, the level needed for a nuclear weapon.

Some Bush administration officials and some nuclear experts here at the I.A.E.A. and elsewhere suspect that the Iranians may not be driving for a weapon but the ability to have sufficient stockpiles of low-enriched uranium that they could produce a bomb within months of evicting inspectors, as North Korea did in 2003. That capacity alone could serve as a nuclear deterrent.

One senior European diplomat, who declined to speak for attribution, said that Washington would now have to confront the question of whether it wants to keep Iran from producing any nuclear material, or whether it wants to keep it from gaining the ability to build a weapon on short notice.

Continued stalemate, the diplomat said, allows Iran to move toward that ability.

But hawks in the administration say that the only position President Bush can take now, without appearing to back down, is to stick to the administration’s past argument that “not one centrifuge spins” in Iran. They argue for escalating sanctions and the threat that, if diplomacy fails, the United States could destroy the nuclear facilities.

But even inside the administration, many officials, particularly in the State Department and the Pentagon, argue that military action would create greater chaos in the Middle East and Iranian retribution against American forces in Iraq, and possibly elsewhere.

Moreover, they have argued that Iran’s enrichment facilities are still at an early enough stage that a military strike would not set the country’s program back very far. Such a strike, they argue, would make sense only once large facilities had been built.

Iran lawmakers seek U.S. friendship

By ALI AKBAR DAREINI,
Associated Press Writer


TEHRAN, Iran - Iranian deputies were gathering signatures to try and form an Iranian-U.S. friendship committee in parliament to hold contacts with the U.S. Congress, legislators involved in the effort said Tuesday.


It was the first effort organized by parliament to find a way to bridge nearly three decades of estrangement between the U.S. and Iran. It comes days after the governments of the two countries agreed to hold direct talks on one of the main issues dividing them — the conflict in Iraq.

Darioush Ghanbari, one of at least 10 deputies who has signed the document calling for the establishment of the committee, said Iranian parliamentarians were seeking to reduce tensions with America and "explain Iran's realities to the U.S. Congress."

The document had signatures from both conservatives and reformists and more signatures from the 290-member legislature were expected by the end of the day, Ghanbari said.

"In the absence of formal diplomatic relations, we seek to establish a parliamentary relationship with the U.S. Congress and fill the existing gap of contacts between the two nations," Ghanbari, a pro-reform lawmaker, told The Associated Press.

No specific number of deputies is required to form such a committee. The document signed by lawmakers will be presented to the parliament's speaker, who has the right to accept or reject it.

It was unclear what he would do. The speaker is Gholam Ali Haddad Adel, a close associate of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who holds final say in all matters in Iran. Haddad Adel is considered a relative moderate among the conservatives and hard-liners who make up Iran's top leadership, and it is likely he would consult with Khamenei before taking any decision.

Washington severed diplomatic ties with Tehran after Iranian militant students stormed its embassy in Tehran in 1979, to protest America's refusal to hand over Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi for trial.

Ever since, talk of ties with the United States has long been a taboo among Iran's hard-line clerical leadership. Hard-liners stymied cautious efforts by reformists in the late 1990s to open up contacts with Americans — though the leadership has condoned occasional talks on specific issues with Washington.

One hard-line lawmaker, Saeed Aboutaleb, denounced the effort to create the friendship committee, saying Tuesday, "the nation will strike the mouth of these lawmakers."

Khamenei's stance on the committee was not known. But Iran's acceptance of ambassador-level talks with the U.S. on improving Iraq's security could be a sign the supreme leader sees the need for contact with the United States amid the two countries' escalating tensions.

The United States accuses Iran of fueling Iraq's violence by backing militants there, a charge Iran denies. Tehran, in turn, says the U.S. troop presence in Iraq is the cause of the country's turmoil. Washington and its allies also accuse Iran of seeking to build nuclear weapons — a charge Iran also denies — and the
United Nations has imposed limited sanctions on Iran for refusing to suspend uranium enrichment.

The Iraqi government — which is backed by the United States but also close to Iran — has pushed for the two countries to end their disputes.

Proponents of the friendship committee said it could help avert anti-Iranian legislation by the U.S. Congress.

"If (Iranian) government officials are reconciling with Americans, why can't the Iranian nation reconcile with the American people?" said Jalal Hosseini, another Iranian reformist lawmaker who signed the petition.

"We are seeking to form this friendship committee to undermine anti-Iran policies of the Bush administration and show our good will and our peace-loving spirits," he said.

West should adapt to Iran atom advances: ElBaradei

By Mark Heinrich

VIENNA (Reuters) - Iran's progress in enriching uranium has rendered unrealistic world powers' quest to prevent Tehran from gaining nuclear expertise, the U.N. atomic watchdog agency director said.


Mohamed ElBaradei did not take issue with aU.N. Security Council demand that Iran suspend enrichment in exchange for a suspension of sanctions against it and talks on a solution that would allay suspicion Tehran is trying to build atom bombs.

"Quite clearly, suspension is a requirement by the Security Council, and I would hope the Iranians would listen to the world community," ElBaradei, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, said in remarks released by the IAEA.

"But from a proliferation perspective, the fact of the matter is that one of the purposes of suspension -- keeping them from getting the knowledge -- has been overtaken by events," he said.

Iran has ramped up its program from the research level since the start of 2007, installing more than 1,600 enrichment centrifuges, divided into 10 fuel-cycle "cascades," or networks, in an underground complex by the start of May, diplomats said.

Tehran has been hooking up one cascade every week or so, they said, and intends to have 3,000 operational by next month to lay a foundation for "industrial-scale" enrichment.

Speaking a week ahead of a International Atomic Energy Agency report on Iran to the Security Council, ElBaradei said it would be more sensible to cap Iranian enrichment short of industrial scale rather than try to freeze it altogether.

"Until all outstanding verification issues are clarified, and the agency is able to verify the peaceful nature of Iran's nuclear program, the focus should be to stop them from going to industrial scale production, to allow us to do a full court press inspection and to be sure they remain inside the (nuclear Non-Proliferation) treaty," ElBaradei said.

Citing national pride and a sovereign right to nuclear energy for economic development, Iran has ruled out a nuclear halt before, during or even as an outcome of negotiations. It insists the enrichment program is only to yield electricity.


"A FACT"

"We believe they pretty much have the knowledge about how to enrich. From now on, it is simply a question of perfecting that knowledge. People will not like to hear it, but that's a fact," ElBaradei said.

"The key message he is trying to get across to the world is that as long as this standoff, this confrontation goes on, and Iran is not suspending, they will continue to develop their industrial capability," said one diplomat close to the IAEA.

If the pending IAEA report certifies, as widely anticipated, that Iran has ignored a May 23 deadline set by the Security Council to suspend enrichment, it will face a third, broader and harsher round of U.N. sanctions.

Three-thousand centrifuges would be enough to refine uranium fuel for a bomb within a year should Iran want to do so.

The New York Times quoted IAEA officials on Monday as saying the agency had concluded Iran is starting to enrich uranium in much larger dimensions after solving technical glitches that dogged its research-scale program.

But this did not mean Iran had attained industrial capacity, said Mark Fitzpatrick, non-proliferation analyst at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London.

"(It is not clear yet) whether the centrifuges are operating at normal speed, whether the cascades are linked together and whether they are working continuously. Until then, they cannot be said to have mastered the technology..., (although) at some point this year or next, Iran likely will reach that breakthrough," he told Reuters.

Who will benefit more from U.S.-Iran talks?

15/05/2007

By Amina Anderson

"Iran has agreed to talk to the U.S. side over Iraq, in Iraq, in order to relieve the pain of the Iraqi people, to support the government and to reinforce security in Iraq," Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini announced on Sunday.

The talks, whose date and venue aren’t yet known, would represent the first time that Iranian and American officials sit together face-to-face since Washington severed diplomatic ties with Tehran following the Islamic Revolution in Iran in 1979.

The negotiations come at a critical time as the two countries step up rhetoric against each other, with the U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney warning Iran aboard a U.S. aircraft carrier in the Gulf that Washington is ready to use its naval power to curb Tehran’s nuclear plans and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad responding by threatening to retaliate severely to any possible U.S. attack.

Although the two sides stress that the contacts would be “about Iraq and only Iraq”, in the words of White House spokesman Tony Snow, officials from both countries hope the direct talks may act as a catalyst for future discussions on a broad range of issues that could pave the way for a long-term bilateral process.

Ironically, Iran and the U.S. have common interests in the region.

Both countries back the Iraqi government, and both want to establish stability in Iraq. This is why Tehran always denies U.S. allegations that it’s fueling the violence in the war-torn country.

Despite the Bush administration’s insistence that the planned talks didn’t presage a retreat from a three-decade-old U.S. policy to isolate the Islamic Republic, Iranian officials hailed Washington’s request to hold talks with Tehran as recognition that Iran is a major player in the Middle East. Others said the talks could eventually lead to further negotiations over the nuclear standoff.

“It has been proved internationally that the problems in Iraq, Afghanistan, Lebanon and the Middle East cannot be solved without Iran... The Americans are at last obliged to recognize Iran as an effective player in the region,” according to an editorial on Iran News.

On the other hand, U.S. officials consider the talks as the best avenue for stabilizing Iraq. “I was heartened to see that the United States and Iran are finally, evidently, going to sit down and talk. I've been calling for engagement with Iran for four years,” Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel of Nebraska said.

Iran’s former deputy foreign minister Mohammad Sadr agreed, saying: “The U.S. is realistic in its foreign policy and is seeking solutions for its problems in Iraq, and Iran is one of these solutions.”

But he said that “negotiation over Iraq will have no effect on Iran’s nuclear dossier, and that’s why I suggest that the negotiations should be comprehensive, because on the one hand the U.S. feels a need for Iran’s help in Iraq and on the other hand it is seriously pursuing its plan for a new UN resolution expanding sanctions on Iran.”

Whether Washington likes it or not, Tehran is a major regional power with great influence in the region, Iranian analysts say. If the U.S. accepts this as a fact, both countries could build trust and resolve other disputes. But if Washington only wants to use Tehran as a tool to reduce the growing discontent at home over the Iraq war in order to pretend that it’s seeking every possible way to withdraw from Iraq, without making some goodwill gestures towards Iran, this will be interpreted as an insincere move which will only lead to more distrust between the two countries.

The U.S. Republicans are seeking to prevent Iraq from becoming a new Vietnam, and one of the ways out of the Iraqi quagmire is negotiating with Iran, said Mohammad-Ali Abtahi, an aide to former president Mohammad Khatami.

“Given Iran’s importance in the region and the country’s deep influence over Iraq, the U.S. should back down from its anti-Iranian position, especially in regard to Iran’s nuclear program,” he added.

Meanwhile, political expert Amir Mohebbian says the talks will only benefit the United States. If Washington believes that Tehran is capable of creating a better situation in Iraq and improving regional security, which would greatly benefit the U.S., the White House should also act positively towards Tehran, he says.

An editorial on Iranian newspaper, Tehran-E-Emruz, also argued that the Islamic Republic has nothing to gain from the talks, while the United States will certainly win. “If the situation in Iraq improves after negotiations, America will claim that Iran was the root of the insecurity and if Iraq becomes more insecure, the Americans will say that it's useless negotiating with Iran. So in both scenarios, America will achieve its aims."