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NUKEWARS
Only threat to regime will budge 'mad' Tehran: Britain
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) Oct 07, 2012


Iran minister floats 'trade-off' in nuclear dispute
Berlin (AFP) Oct 07, 2012 - The Iranian foreign minister has proposed a "trade-off" in the country's stand-off with the West over its disputed nuclear programme, in an interview with a German news magazine.

In Monday's edition of Der Spiegel, Ali Akbar Salehi reiterates that Iran has a right to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes and insists there is no proof it is conducting nuclear research for military ends.

However he said: "If our right to enrichment is recognised, we are ready for a trade-off. We would, on a voluntary basis, limit the amount of our enrichment."

But he said in the interview published in German that Iran would need "the guaranteed supply" of appropriate fuels from abroad.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said last week that Iran would not back down on its nuclear drive despite the problems caused by Western sanctions, including a dramatic slide in the value of its currency.

European Union ministers are due to meet on October 15 when Britain, France and Germany will press for tougher sanctions on Iran's energy sector and financial institutions.

The world should tighten the squeeze on Iran over its "mad" nuclear plans to the point where the regime's survival is threatened by its own people, Britain's defence secretary said Sunday.

Philip Hammond told The Observer newspaper that there were signs the regime was beginning to "fracture" on the issue of its disputed nuclear programme.

The West worries Iran is trying to develop an atomic bomb under cover of a civilian nuclear energy programme but Tehran insists its intentions are purely peaceful.

Hammond's comments come ahead of a meeting of European Union ministers on October 15, when Britain, France and Germany will press for toughening up sanctions on Iran's energy sector and financial institutions.

"There is talk of a general trade embargo and of shutting down the remaining access that Iran has to international banking channels. We can definitely make the pain much greater," he told the weekly.

"The only thing that is likely to budge the regime is if they see or sense an existential threat.

"If the level of economic pressure starts to translate into potentially regime-threatening disruption and dissent on the streets of Tehran, then they may change course."

In one week, Iran's rial currency has shed around 40 percent of its value, sharply accelerating a slide that has gone on over the course of this year as Western sanctions have worsened the Islamic republic's underlying economic woes.

"There is evidence that the leadership is beginning to fracture over this question. They are beginning to turn on each other as the pain gets transmitted through. And they can end it all instantly," Hammond said.

"Their professed position is that they're enriching uranium for peaceful purposes. Nobody believes them."

He stressed that nobody was out to cause more suffering for the Iranian people and said regime change was not the aim -- it was merely to apply the pressure needed to force Tehran to drop its nuclear programme.

"There is further tightening we can do," Hammond said.

"We can definitely make the pain much greater. Nobody wants to cause the Iranian people to suffer unnecessarily but this mad scheme to build a bomb has to be brought to an end."

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NUKEWARS
Iran judge condemns American to death for spying
Tehran (AFP) Jan 9, 2012
An Iranian judge sentenced a US-Iranian man to death for spying for the CIA, media reported Monday, exacerbating high tensions in the face of Western sanctions on the Islamic republic's nuclear programme. Amir Mirzai Hekmati, a 28-year-old former Marine born in the United States to an Iranian family, was "sentenced to death for cooperating with a hostile nation, membership of the CIA and try ... read more


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