EU-Iran Talks Ease Suspense on Suspension
Paul Kerr
Following a tense few weeks, Hassan
Rowhani, secretary of Iran’s Supreme
National Security Council, and the
foreign ministers from France, Germany,
and the United Kingdom agreed May 25 to
continue negotiations regarding Tehran’s
gas centrifuge-based uranium-enrichment
program. Significantly, Iran appears to
have agreed to back off earlier threats to
resume work on the program.
Additionally, the European ministers
agreed to make “detailed proposals” to
Iran by August, British Foreign Secretary
Jack Straw told reporters.
Although several Iranian officials had
warned that Tehran would end negotiations
if dissatisfied with the one-day
meeting’s outcome, Rowhani expressed
optimism after the meeting, telling reporters
that the two sides can now likely
reach agreement “in a reasonably short
time.” The May 25 agreement still awaits
Iran’s formal approval.
Tehran agreed in November to suspend
its enrichment program while the two
sides negotiate a “mutually acceptable
agreement,” which includes “objective
guarantees” that Iran’s nuclear program
is “exclusively for peaceful purposes”
as well as cooperative arrangements on
economic, political, and security matters.
(See ACT, December 2004.)
Iran’s European interlocutors want
complete cessation of the program, but
Tehran continues to resist the idea. Uranium
enrichment can produce fuel for
civilian nuclear reactors as well as fissile
material for nuclear weapons.
The Europeans suggested the meeting
after Iran in late April began threatening
to resume work at its uranium-conversion
facility. Such facilities can
convert lightly processed uranium ore
into feedstock for centrifuges. The November
suspension agreement includes
“all tests or production at any uranium
conversion installation.”
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