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US, China acknowledge 'good progress' in Iran talks: US

Chavez says world should reduce pressure on Iran
Caracas (AFP) May 12, 2010 - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez on Wednesday said the international community should ease up on Iran, which he said was "not the biggest threat in the world." "They accuse Iran of making the atomic bomb. Why don't those who make the accusations set an example? ... Iran isn't the biggest threat in the world," Chavez said during a public act. Europe and the United States have long accused Iran of seeking to develop a nuclear weapons under the guise of its civilian nuclear energy program, a charge Tehran denies.

"There's no evidence that contradicts what the Iranian government is saying to the world: that they're not making any bomb," Chavez added. The leftist leader said an initiative by Brazil to reduce tensions with Iran was very interesting and lauded a visit by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva visit to Tehran due next week. Iran and Western powers are at an impasse over a UN-drafted nuclear fuel swap deal for Tehran, which envisages supplying Iran with nuclear fuel in exchange for its low-enriched uranium stocks.

Brazil, a rotating UN Security Council member, is resisting a US-led push for UN sanctions against Iran, and has said it is ready to host a nuclear fuel swap if asked by Tehran. The United States wants Iran to stop enriching uranium, which can be used as fuel either for civilian power reactors or atomic weapons. Chavez, a long-time US critic, is one of Iran's main allies in South America and has strengthened his relations with Tehran in recent years.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) May 12, 2010
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and a Chinese official acknowledged "good progress" had been made when they talked about efforts to impose new sanctions on Iran, a US official said Wednesday.

State Department spokesman Philip Crowley said Clinton and China's state councilor Dai Bingguo spoke for more than an hour by telephone late Tuesday, discussing both Iran and North Korea, whose nuclear programs worry Washington.

"They talked about the status of discussions on Iran sanctions. They acknowledged that good progress has been made," Crowley told reporters.

They discussed "a couple of technical issues in the drafting... of the draft (UN sanctions) resolution and pledged that both sides would continue to work hard within the P5-plus-1 to resolve remaining questions," Crowley said.

He was referring to the permanent five members of the UN Security Council -- the United States, China, Russia, France and Britain -- plus Germany, or the group that is spearheading diplomatic efforts to curb Iran's nuclear ambitions.

He added that diplomats from the P5-plus-1 met earlier Wednesday in New York, the site of the UN headquarters.

On April 22, US Vice President Joe Biden said that China will sign on to new United Nations sanctions on Iran despite Beijing's long insistence in favoring a diplomatic solution over punitive measures.

Washington has been trying to persuade China for months to accept toughened sanctions. Beijing has agreed to join talks at the UN on a toughened regime, but has yet to make its position clear.

Meanwhile, Crowley said Dai briefed Clinton on a visit to China last week by North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il, which come on top of briefings Chinese officials earlier gave senior US diplomats about the visit.

Dai "gave the secretary a little more insight into the recent visit to Beijing by Kim Jong-Il," Crowley said without elaborating.

Pyongyang's official media on Saturday reported that Kim said the isolated Stalinist state remains committed to nuclear disarmament, a year after quitting six-party talks on its atomic arsenal.

North Korea, which has tested two nuclear bombs, last year bolted from six-nation talks involving North Korea and South Korea, China, the United States, Russia and Japan.



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