Skip to main content

Eurasianet

Main Menu

  • Regions
  • Topics
  • Media
  • About
  • Search
  • Newsletter
  • русский
  • Support us
X

Caucasus

Armenia
Azerbaijan
Georgia

Central Asia

Kazakhstan
Kyrgyzstan
Tajikistan
Turkmenistan
Uzbekistan

Conflict Zones

Abkhazia
Nagorno Karabakh
South Ossetia

Eastern Europe

Belarus
Moldova
Russia
The Baltics
Ukraine

Eurasian Fringe

Afghanistan
China
EU
Iran
Mongolia
Turkey
United Kingdom
United States
X

Environment

Economy

Politics

Kazakhstan's Bloody January 2022
Kyrgyzstan 2020 unrest

Security

Society

American diplomats in Central Asia
Arts and Culture
Coronavirus
Student spotlight
X

Visual Stories

Podcast
Video

Blogs

Tamada Tales
The Bug Pit

Podcasts

EurasiaChat
Expert Opinions
The Central Asianist
X
You can search using keywords to narrow down the list.
Iran

Iran: New Signals Could Hint at Pressure from Moscow, Beijing

Golnaz Esfandiari Jun 17, 2006

Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad called a package of international incentives aimed at persuading Tehran to abandon sensitive nuclear activities "a step forward" on June 16. The comments come one day after Ahmadinejad met with the Russian and Chinese presidents on the sidelines of a Eurasian summit in Shanghai. Moscow and Beijing have resisted Western efforts to seek UN Security Council sanctions against Iran, but recent events suggest they are also pressing Tehran to make some concessions to international concerns.

President Ahmadinejad's encouraging assessment of the incentives package was accompanied by less clear language about when Iran will formally respond to the offer."We see this [package] overall as a step forward, and I've asked my colleagues to carefully consider it," Ahmadinejad said. "God willing, we will express our views within the framework of the national interests of the Islamic Republic of Iran."Ready for Dialog?The comments are Ahmadinejad's first public response to the package, and come less than 24 hours after talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Putin had emerged from that June 15 meeting claiming that Iran was "positively" assessing the offer.Putin also said Ahmadinejad had assured him that Iran was ready to resume dialog on its controversial nuclear program.The package of proposals is backed by the five permanent members of the UN Security Council (Britain, China, France, Russia, and the United States) plus Germany.It reportedly contains a number of industrial and economic incentives, including the possible lifting of some US trade sanctions against Tehran. It is also believed to include the supply of at least one light-water nuclear reactor to Iran.US officials have warned that if Iran turns down the incentives, it could face "the weight of the Security Council," which could push for sanctions.Today in Shanghai, President Ahmadinejad rejected the threat of sanctions to pressure his country on the nuclear issue."I think the word 'sanction' should be removed from the political [lexicon]," Ahmadinejad said. "Sanctions should not be used as a threat or as a tool for exerting pressure"Ahmadinejad -- who has repeatedly invoked national pride in defending Iranian nuclear activities -- said his country supports "constructive talks on equal footing."Some SkepticismAhmadinejad also said that Iran is not seeking to develop nuclear weapons. Despite similar comments by Iranian officials, Western countries are concerned that Iran could use enriched uranium, for producing nuclear bombs. The United States has accused Tehran of a covert nuclear weapons program. The UN's nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), says Iran has failed to convince it that its nuclear efforts are purely peaceful in nature.Chinese media quoted President Hu Jintao on June 16 as telling Ahmadinejad that while China understands Iran's concern over its right to a peaceful nuclear program, "the critical point" is "to build mutual trust between Iran and the international community."President Putin said after the meeting with Ahmadinejad on June 15 that any country, including Iran, has a right to use nuclear technology. But he added that countries must do it in a way that "does not arouse the concerns of the international community on the nonproliferation issue."Mounting PressureSpeaking on June 16, Ahmadinejad did not disclose the details of his talks with Putin or Hu. But he said "our views and positions on many issues are close, or even identical."Russia and China, which each have significant economic interests in Iran, have pressed for negotiations to defuse the standoff with the United States and Europe over Iran's nuclear program.Both countries have called on Iran to seriously consider the current offer.Chinese President Hu reportedly said the package of incentives provides a "new opportunity for the settlement of the issue."The US ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Agency, Gregory L. Shulte, has called on Iran to respond positively to the offer and suspend its uranium enrichment.The United States and the other five countries that agreed on the package have not set a concrete deadline for Iran to respond.EU foreign policy chief Solana said on June 14 that he has held "constructive" telephone conversations with Iran's top nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani.Solana had officially conveyed the package of incentives to Iran during a visit to Tehran on June 6.Agencies report that EU leaders gathered at an EU summit in Brussels are expected to call on Iran to take the "positive path" and give an "early response" to the package.On June 15, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said that Iranian officials might need "some extra time" before they can formally react to the proposals.Iranian officials have said they will respond in "due course" while stressing that talks should be "unconditional."

Sign up for Eurasianet's free weekly newsletter. Support Eurasianet: Help keep our journalism open to all, and influenced by none.

Related

Further strain in Azerbaijan-Iran relations
Azerbaijan's president blames Iran for embassy attack
Turkmenistan: Bear trap

Popular

Azerbaijan launches multi-day tours of Shusha
Heydar Isayev
Kazakhstan: Ruling party sees dominant role trimmed, but little change expected
Kazakhstan: Low election turnout tempers talk of political reset
Almaz Kumenov

Eurasianet

  • About
  • Team
  • Contribute
  • Republishing
  • Privacy Policy
  • Corrections
  • Contact
Eurasianet © 2023