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Iran, Venezuela slam 'imperialism' as Ahmadinejad visits
by Staff Writers
Caracas (AFP) Jan 9, 2012

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez (R) gestures next to his Iranian counterpart Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (L) during his visit to Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas on January 9, 2012. Photo courtesy AFP.

Venezuela and Iran railed against Western imperialism Monday as Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad began a tour of Latin America amid mounting tensions over Tehran's suspect nuclear program.

As the Iranian leader met with firebrand Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez in Caracas, the UN's atomic energy watchdog confirmed that Iran had started enriching uranium at a new site in a difficult-to-bomb mountain bunker, in a move set to stoke Western suspicions that Tehran wants atomic weapons.

Iran also ratcheted up tensions with the United States by sentencing to death a US-Iranian man for allegedly spying for the CIA, a move quickly condemned by Washington.

Chavez and Ahmadinejad, who have strengthened ties in recent years and intensified their hostility towards Washington, greeted each other as "brothers" before a meeting to study bilateral deals.

"There's a desire for our governments to keep working together... to slow down the imperialist madness that has now been unleashed more than ever," Chavez said outside the Miraflores presidential palace.

"The Venezuelan and Iranian people are on the way to fighting all the greed and arrogance of imperialism," Ahmadinejad said.

The Iranian leader is under increasing pressure from the United States and the European Union to abandon his country's suspect nuclear program, which Tehran insists exists solely for peaceful purposes.

Iranian political and military officials have meanwhile threatened to close the Strait of Hormuz, a major oil shipping lane, if threatened by military action or if Western sanctions halt oil exports.

In Latin America, Venezuela's relationship with Iran raises the deepest strategic and political concerns for the West, although Tehran has the strongest economic ties with Brazil.

Observers wonder how much the leftist Chavez might undermine international sanctions against Iran by providing fuel or cash to the Islamic republic.

"It's possible that he'll share very radical and confrontational decisions with Ahmadinejad, but he could also suggest mediation, projecting a more conciliatory image, which would suit the leadership role he wants to take in Latin America," said Venezuelan analyst Elsa Cardozo, from the Metropolitan University of Caracas.

Ahmadinejad's arrival in Caracas came as Washington announced that the Venezuelan consul in Miami had been expelled.

Livia Acosta Noguera was accused in a documentary on Spanish-language channel Univision of links to a suspected Iranian cyber-plot against US nuclear facilities.

Venezuela and Iran, which both belong to OPEC, have economic ties worth around $5 billion as well as deals from building low-income homes to bicycles in Venezuela, most of which have yet to start.

Ahmadinejad, who is traveling with his foreign, economy and energy ministers, last visited Venezuela in November 2009.

He was due to travel Tuesday to Nicaragua to attend the inauguration ceremony for President Daniel Ortega, before traveling to Cuba and Ecuador.

In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said the United States was "calling on all of these countries to do what they can to impress upon the Iranian regime that the course that it's on in its nuclear dialogue with the international community is the wrong one."

"We think it's in the interest of all countries, including the countries that he's visiting in Latin America, that Iran proves the peaceful intent of its nuclear program to the world," Nuland said.

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Turkey FM to meet senior US official for Iran nuclear talks
Ankara (AFP) Jan 9, 2012 - Turkey's Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu was due to meet US Deputy Secretary of State William Burns late Monday for talks on Iran's disputed nuclear programme, Turkish diplomatic sources told AFP.

The meeting in Ankara would also focus on a wide range of issues from the Arab Spring to the developments in Iraq and Syria, the sources said.

Burns' visit is part of a regular consultation mechanism between Turkey and the United States, they added.

The United States has ratcheted up sanctions on Iran over its nuclear programme, which the West believes masks a drive to develop atomic weapons.

Iran insists the programme is exclusively for peaceful purposes.

The European Union is expected to announce further sanctions of its own, including an oil embargo, at the end of this month.

Turkey says it is only bound by sanctions decided by the UN Security Council.

Turkey met around 40 percent of its oil needs from Iran in 2011, and its biggest refiner Tupras recently made a deal to purchase nine million tons of crude from Tehran.

Burns's visit comes amid rising tensions, with Iran holding naval war games and warning arch-foe the United States to keep an aircraft carrier out of the Gulf.

Washington dismissed the warning.

Davutoglu was in Tehran on Thursday, when his Iranian counterpart Ali Akbar Salehi said he would like to see a resumption of the nuclear talks with world powers last held in Istanbul a year ago.

"Turkey is ready to do its best for a peaceful solution to the nuclear dispute," a Turkish foreign ministry diplomat told AFP.

"What's important is to reduce tension."

The diplomat said no date has been agreed yet for the resumption of nuclear talks.



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NUKEWARS
Iran stokes nuclear fears with bunker facility
Vienna (AFP) Jan 9, 2012
The UN atomic agency said Monday that Iran is now enriching uranium at a new site in a hard-to-bomb mountain bunker, in a move set to stoke Western suspicions further that Tehran wants nuclear weapons. US State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said that Iran's enriching uranium to 20 percent at the Fordo site was "a further escalation of their ongoing violations with regard to their nu ... read more


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