http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/06/AR2007050600
361.html

Iran deal sought to avert atom pact talks collapse





By Mark Heinrich
Reuters
Sunday, May 6, 2007; 9:05 AM 


VIENNA (Reuters) - A 130-nation meeting on how to fix the fraying nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty faces collapse on Monday unless
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/iran.html?nav=el> Iran
accepts a last-minute South African proposal to overcome its objections to
the agenda.

The gathering, due to run two weeks to May 11, was meant to set priorities
to flesh out at follow-up annual meetings leading to the next
decision-making NPT Review Conference in 2010.

But the session quickly snagged on procedural rows with a strong whiff of
the standoff between Western powers and Iran over its suspected
non-compliance with NPT safeguards, pre-empting debate on proposals to
reinforce the treaty.

"I think a decision will come on Monday whether we will have to go home with
nothing to show for this meeting ... because it was taken hostage by Iran,"
said a senior European diplomat.

The NPT binds members without nuclear bombs not to acquire them, guarantees
the right of all members to nuclear energy for peaceful ends, and obligates
the original five nuclear powers from the post-World War Two era to
dismantle arsenals in stages.

Iran blamed arch-foe the United States for the impasse, accusing it of
authoring an agenda text designed to single out Tehran as the main NPT
offender and muzzle criticism of big powers over their slowness to phase out
nuclear arsenals.

Washington has not answered Iran's broadside and has stayed out of sparring
between Western allies and Iran over its hold-up of the required consensus
for the meeting's agenda.

DISARMAMENT

A senior Western official said the United States was keeping a low profile,
pointing out that many developing nations in the Non-Aligned Movement to
which Iran belongs were not happy with Tehran's maneuvering, and that it was
a major NAM nation,
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/southafrica.html?nav=e
l> South Africa, that had intervened to overcome the Iranian challenge.

Pretoria proposed that the agenda phrase in dispute -- "reaffirming the need
for full compliance" with the NPT -- be clarified with an attached
declaration saying this meant compliance "with all provisions" of the
treaty.

Meeting chairman
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/japan.html?nav=el>
Japan will seek consensus for the idea when proceedings resume on Monday.
Iran promised to consider it.

The semantic tweak was designed to assure Iran that debate would also push
states with atomic bombs to do more to heed pledges to do away with them,
not just pinion Tehran for defying U.N. resolutions to suspend nuclear
activity.

The Islamic Republic rejects as unfounded Western suspicions that it is
covertly trying to build atom bombs behind the facade of a civilian nuclear
energy program within terms of the NPT.

But U.N. sanctions have been imposed on Iran, which has not fully cooperated
with U.N. nuclear watchdog investigations begun after sensitive Iranian
atomic research came to light.

Disarmament campaigners making presentations to the meeting said Iran, as
well as
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/korea.html?nav=el>
North Korea which bolted from the NPT in 2003 and detonated a nuclear device
last year, pose serious risks to the treaty's integrity.

But they said plans by nuclear-armed states to upgrade their weapons, even
if that means reducing their overall number, and keep them as symbols of
strength have eroded respect for the NPT and may spur some nations in
unstable regions to circumvent it.

Other bad examples, they say, include the failure of big powers like the
United States and
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/china.html?nav=el>
China to ratify an atomic test ban treaty, and a U.S. nuclear technology
pact with
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/india.html?nav=el>
India, which built atom bombs without penalty by staying out of the NPT.

 



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