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EU disappointed after Iran nuclear talks

The European Union said it was disappointed after talks with Iran on Friday seen as a last chance to avert U.S. pressure for tougher international sanctions over Tehran's disputed atomic programme.

Posted: Friday, November 30, 2007, 22:03 (GMT)
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"It's quite clear from Solana's public remarks that the Iranians have not agreed to comply fully with the requirements of the Security Council to suspend its enrichment programme," said a spokesman for Britain's foreign ministry. He said London would make the case in Paris on Saturday for tougher sanctions.

The five permanent members of the Security Council plus Germany plan to draft a new resolution imposing wider financial, trade and visa restrictions to increase pressure on Tehran to stop enriching uranium, which can be used in atomic bombs.

But the six powers remain at odds over how soon to resort to more United Nations penalties, or how harsh they should be.

Russia and China, and to a lesser extent Germany, have close commercial ties with Iran and are likely to tailor their new sanctions proposals accordingly, taking a less hawkish approach than that of the United States, Britain and France.

Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said late on Thursday that nothing would deflect Iran from its pursuit of nuclear technology and that Washington had "lost".

"The Iranian nation will never return from the path that they have chosen and they are determined and decisive to continue this path (to obtain nuclear technology)," Mottaki was quoted as saying by the official IRNA news agency.

"America is angry with Iran over its nuclear programme but they know that the cost of attacking Iran will be very high," Mottaki told a gathering of the Basij religious militia. "America has lost in its nuclear challenge with Iran."

Iran says it is cooperating with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), referring to an August agreement under which Tehran pledged to the Vienna-based body to clear up suspicions about past secret atomic activities.

Iran has barred inspections beyond uranium production sites since its case was referred to the U.N. Security Council in February 2006, fuelling suspicions in the West that it has a covert parallel military nuclear programme.

The IAEA sees wide-ranging access to Iran's sites, provided for under the IAEA's Additional Protocol with member states, as key to verifying there is no such programme.

"Iran has no programme to discuss the Additional Protocol at its parliament and Iran has no commitment regarding the implementation of the Additional Protocol," Mottaki said.



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