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Russia FM in surprise Iran visit for nuclear talks

by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) Oct 30, 2007
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov arrived in Iran Tuesday on a surprise visit for talks with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad over the controversial Iranian nuclear programme.

Lavrov, whose visit was only announced in the morning, arrived in the early evening and went straight into talks with Ahmadinejad, an AFP photographer reported.

"He will examine a series of subjects linked to the situation of the Iranian nuclear programme and questions concerning bilateral relations," Russian foreign ministry spokesman Mikhail Kamynin was quoted as saying by the Interfax news agency earlier.

Lavrov's brief trip comes just two weeks after a landmark visit to Iran by Russian President Vladimir Putin, the first by a Kremlin chief since World War II. He was not expected to make any statements to the media.

Putin has in recent weeks been increasingly critical of US moves for more UN sanctions and unilateral sanctions as well as Washington's refusal to rule out military action against Tehran over its nuclear programme.

"Why make the situation worse, bring it to a dead end, threaten sanctions or even military action," he said last Thursday ahead of an EU-Russia summit in Lisbon.

"You can run around like mad people wielding razor blades but it is not the best way to resolve the problem."

Some Iranian officials said after Putin's visit that he made a proposal over the Iranian nuclear programme to supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. However this was never confirmed by Moscow.

The United States and its European allies accuse Iran of seeking a nuclear bomb and are threatening a third set of UN sanctions against Tehran to punish its nuclear defiance.

However Russia, a veto-wielding permanent UN Security Council member which has close economic ties with Tehran, has repeatedly expressed doubt over the Western claims that Iran's nuclear drive has military aims.

China also issued an unusually blunt statement saying it remained opposed to further sanctions against Iran and insisted diplomacy was the best way to resolve the issue.

"Under the current circumstances we do not support further sanctions, as that would worsen the situation," foreign ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao told reporters.

The White House has recently ramped up its rhetoric against Iran, warning the world about "nuclear holocaust" and "World War III" if Tehran obtained atomic weapons.

But White House spokeswoman Dana Perino sought to calm fears that US President George W. Bush was about to launch a military attack against the Islamic republic.

"There's no reason for people to think that the president is about to attack Iran. I think that we need to make that clear," she said.

But Ahmadinejad meanwhile reaffirmed that Iran would never give in to the chief Western demand over its nuclear drive -- that it suspends uranium enrichment.

"All the plans to stop the Iranian people have failed and the enemies know that they cannot prevent the progress of Iran," he said.

Putin's lightning one-day visit to Tehran for a summit of Caspian Sea heads of state was hailed by Iran as a major diplomatic success.

But a shadow was cast by his refusal to commit to a concrete date for the completion of Iran's first nuclear power plant, a much delayed project that a Russian contractor is building in the southern city of Bushehr.

Meanwhile, a UN nuclear agency delegation headed by deputy director general Olli Heinonen held a second day of talks with Iranian officials on Iran's use of uranium-enriching centrifuges.

The talks are part of a deal Heinonen clinched in August for Iran to answer outstanding questions over its atomic programme but the accord has been bitterly criticised by the United States for not going far enough.

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Outside View: Tehran opts for the hard way
Moscow (UPI) Oct 29, 2007
Tehran's tough new stance in its dialogue with the U.N. Security Council over its nuclear program, heralded by the sudden resignation of Ali Larijani as chief negotiator earlier this month, is the product of generational shift in Iran's political elite.







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