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| Iran says the enriched uranium will be used in Tehran reactor which produces medical isotopes [EPA] |
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The
US president has warned Iran of consequences of its failure to respond
to the offer of a nuclear deal, saying that Washington has begun talks
with allies about fresh punishment.
Barack Obama’s tough comments on Thursday came as Iran indicated it
would not ship its low-enriched uranium to Russia for processing, the
centerpiece of deal aimed at a peaceful resolution to Iran’s contested
nuclear programme.
“Iran has taken weeks now and has not shown its willingness to say yes to
this proposal … and so as a consequence we have begun discussions
with our international partners about the importance of having
consequences,” Obama said at a joint news conference with Lee
Myung-bak, the South Korean president, during a visit to Seoul.
He said Iran would not be given an unlimited amount of time, comparing the
Iranian nuclear issue to the years of stop-and-start negotiations with
North Korea about its nuclear ambitions.
“We weren’t going to duplicate what has happened with North Korea,
in which talks just continue forever without any actual resolution to
the issue,” Obama said.
He has advocated a policy of increased engagement, rather than confrontation, on thorny international issues.
Iran was supposed to export the low-grade enriched uranium to Russia
and France where it could be enriched to be used as fuel in Tehran’s
medical-purpose reactor.
Iran rejected the offer and said instead it was prepared to directly
exchange the low-enriched uranium for processed nuclear fuel, providing
the swap took place on Iranian soil.
“It means that we will [instead] consider swapping the [nuclear] fuel simultaneously in Iran,” Obama said.
‘Sanctions outdated’
Iran said the Islamic republic was ready for another round of talks
with world powers over securing fuel for its Tehran research reactor.
The first meeting was held in Vienna on October 19.
The US rejected calls for amendments and further talks on the deal,
with Obama saying that time was running out for diplomacy to resolve
the issue and hinted of imposing further sanctions on Iran.
Iran’s foreign minister rejected talk of further sanctions, saying the West had learnt from “failed experiences” of the past.
“Sanction was the literature of the 60s and 70s,” Manouchehr
Mottaki, who is currently visiting Philippines, said at a news
conference.
“I think they are wise enough not to repeat failed experiences,” he said.
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