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China's Decision On Iran Depends On Kremlin?

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  • China's Decision On Iran Depends On Kremlin?

    CHINA'S DECISION ON IRAN DEPENDS ON KREMLIN?

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    12.11.2009 10:48 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Iran's failure to respond to an international
    offer to enrich much of its uranium stockpile outside the country -
    for use in a Tehran medical research facility - is again raising the
    prospect of tougher sanctions, The Christian Science Monitor reports.

    The article titled "Is Russia playing both sides on Iran nukes?" reads:

    "Much of the focus of the sanctions debate is falling on Russia, which
    has blown hot and cold on additional punitive measures on Iran over
    its nuclear program - but which is sounding open to the idea once
    again. The attention is reviving lingering questions about Russian
    assistance - either official or unauthorized - to Iran's nuclear
    program and weapons research.

    Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and French President Nicolas Sarkozy
    issued a statement Monday warning Iran that "the international
    community's patience is not infinite." The two leaders, in Berlin
    for the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, said they
    "do not rule out" another round of sanctions aimed at the Iranian
    leadership and its advancing nuclear program.

    Those words followed comments by President Medvedev over the
    weekend to German journalists, when he suggested that Russia could
    support additional sanctions if Iran fails to take the opportunity to
    cooperate with world powers in its nuclear program. Noting the offers
    now before the Iranian leadership, Medvedev told Germany's Der Spiegel
    magazine, "I wouldn't like to see all that ending in the introduction
    of international sanctions ... but if there is no movement forward,
    no one is excluding such a scenario."

    The US, Russia, and France last month negotiated a deal with Iranian
    officials to remove almost three-quarters of Iran's slightly-enriched
    uranium stockpile to Russia and France for further enrichment to a
    level needed for a research reactor.

    Removal of the uranium would ease international concerns about Iran's
    nuclear intentions and allow for what the Obama administration hopes
    would be fruitful negotiations with Iran on a range of issues.

    But Iranian state media reports and statements from some Iranian
    lawmakers suggest the government will reject the deal - perhaps
    offering to buy the uranium it needs for its reactor and moving
    its uranium stockpile to a domestic location for international
    surveillance instead.

    Eyes have turned to Russia because, as a veto-wielding member of the
    UN Security Council, it could squelch any move to impose additional
    sanctions through the council. China also holds veto power in
    the Security Council and has discouraged talk of a new sanctions
    resolution, but some diplomats believe that it would go along if
    Russia decided to support new punitive measures.

    Russia also has close economic ties to Iran and a history of
    cooperation with Iran on both its nuclear program and defensive
    military development.

    "There's quite a bit of military cooperation between the two countries,
    and suspected nuclear cooperation before '04," says David Albright,
    president of the Institute for Science and International Security
    in Washington.

    Officially, Russia has sold defensive missile systems to Tehran -
    though it is currently holding up delivery of a more sophisticated
    surface-to-air system, drawing protests from Iranian officials. "The
    Russians seem to modulate that cooperation depending on how things
    are going," Mr. Albright says, noting there could be a connection
    between Iran's lack of response to the uranium deal and the Russian
    brakes on delivery of the new missile system.

    But suspicions have also grown over the last year that Russian
    scientists, perhaps acting in an unofficial or "rogue" capacity,
    have been assisting their Iranian colleagues in pursuit of a nuclear
    weapon and weapons delivery systems. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
    Netanyahu is believed to have flown secretly to Moscow in September
    to present Medvedev and Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin with
    a list of names of Russian scientists that Israel says took nuclear
    know-how to Iran.

    Those reports have prompted some members of Congress to pressure
    President Obama to report to Congress on suspected Russia-Iran
    nuclear cooperation before the US pursues any new or additional
    nuclear accords with Russia."
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