Absolutely fabulous.  Iran, through its intransigence, dragged Russia,
China, Europe, and even Japan closer to creating a new multipolar
world order. -- Yoshie

<http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/02/world/middleeast/02iran.html>
September 2, 2006
Russia Hints It Won't Back Any Penalties Against Iran
By STEVEN LEE MYERS

MOSCOW, Sept. 1 — Russia on Friday cast new doubt on the prospects for
the Bush administration's efforts to punish Iran for refusing to
suspend its nuclear program, even as European leaders expressed
wariness at moving quickly to impose sanctions.

In Moscow, officials expressed regret that an Aug. 31 deadline had
passed without an agreement by Iran to halt its efforts to enrich
uranium that could be used for building nuclear weapons, as American
and European officials believe Iran intends to do.

At the same time, Russian officials made it clear that they do not
support retaliatory sanctions or other steps to isolate Iran's
leadership. That was a view that seemed to be widely shared across
Europe, despite public consternation over Iran's defiance of a United
Nations Security Council resolution.

Despite weeks of diplomacy and compromise among the Security Council's
permanent members — the United States, Britain, France, China and
Russia — the resolute deadline set by the Security Council for Iran to
halt its nuclear work seemed fairly irresolute once it passed.

Russia's defense minister, Sergei B. Ivanov, said that the issue of
sanctions was "not acute," and added that diplomats from the five
permanent members and Germany would meet to discuss further steps.
France's Foreign Ministry said the meeting was scheduled for next
Thursday in Berlin.

Russia's foreign minister, Sergey V. Lavrov, said that Russia favored
continued negotiations and not punitive measures, calling into
question their effectiveness.

Even though Russia previously joined the other permanent members of
the Security Council in setting the deadline for Iran to comply — with
the implicit threat of sanctions — Mr. Lavrov left in doubt whether
Russia would ever agree to any penalties. His view echoed one heard
increasingly here: that sanctions could be a first step toward a new
American-led military conflict in the Middle East.

"We cannot support ultimatums that lead everyone to a dead end and
cause escalation, the logic of which always leads to the use of
force," Mr. Lavrov said, speaking broadly in an address to students at
the Moscow State Institute of International Relations.

At a meeting of European Union foreign ministers in Finland, the
Union's chief foreign affairs official, Javier Solana, was quoted as
saying that there would now be "a period of talks" over the conflict
with Iran, making any discussion of sanctions unreasonable for now.

Other European leaders also expressed eagerness to avoid the immediate
imposition of punitive measures, which they fear would worsen the
confrontation with Iran.

At a joint news conference in Rome with Prime Minister Romano Prodi of
Italy, the French prime minister, Dominique de Villepin, called Iran's
response to the international demands "totally unsatisfying," but said
it remained possible "to go forward with dialogue."

Mr. Prodi agreed. "If there is a even a small opening to get to the
negotiating table," he said, "it should be taken."

United States officials have said no action will be sought against
Tehran until after Mr. Solana meets with Ali Larijani, Iran's nuclear
negotiator, next week.

"We'll find out in the next several weeks whether we're able to
proceed to sanctions," the American ambassador to the United Nations,
John R. Bolton, told CNN on Friday. "We're consulting with European
countries. What we're going to aim at is the leadership of Iran and
the programs involving their nuclear and ballistic missile
capabilities."

In Iran, meantime, officials remained defiant, arguing that the
country is pursuing a peaceful, civilian nuclear program that it has a
right to engage in.

Peter Kiefer contributed reporting from Rome for this article.

<http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/01/world/middleeast/01cnd-iran.html>
September 1, 2006
Europe Is Not Ready to Impose Sanctions on Iran
By DAN BILEFSKY and STEVEN LEE MYERS

BRUSSELS, Sept. 1 — The European Union said today that it was too
early to impose sanctions on Iran for defying a United Nations
deadline to halt uranium enrichment.

Speaking in Lappeenranta, Finland, at an informal meeting of foreign
ministers of the union's member states, Erkki Tuomioja, the Finnish
foreign minister, said the union was determined to use diplomacy to
bring Iran into line, rather than resort to the sanctions that
Washington has pushed harder for in recent days.

"For the E.U., diplomacy remains the No. 1 way forward," said Mr.
Tuomioja, whose country now holds the rotating presidency of the
union. He said at a news conference that "this is not the time or
place" for the international community to impose sanctions on Iran.

Russia, too, expressed wariness today about moving ahead with
sanctions. Together, the statements by the union and by Russia cast
doubt on the prospects for the Bush Admisnistration's efforts to
quickly punish Iran for refusing to suspend enrichment.

In Moscow, officials expressed regret that the Aug. 31 deadline had
passed without an agreement by Iran to halt its efforts to enrich
uranium, a prerequisite for build nuclear weapons, as some Americans
believe Iran intends to do. But at the same time, the officials made
it clear that Russia did not support sanctions or other steps to
isolate Iran's leadership.

That view seemed to be widely shared across Europe, despite
consternation over Iran's defiance of a U.N. Security Council
resolution.

Russia's defense minister and first deputy prime minister, Sergei
Ivanov, said the issue of sanctions was "not acute," and added that
diplomats from the five permanent members of the Security Council and
from Germany would meet in Vienna on Sept. 6 to discuss further steps.
The French Foreign Ministry said a meeting would be held the next day
in Berlin.

Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Russia favored continued
negotiations and not punitive measures, calling into question their
effectiveness. Russia is one of the five veto-wielding permanent
members of the council, along with France, Britain, China and the
United States. France and Britain are both members of the European
Union.

The union's decision to put diplomacy ahead of sanctions could chill
its relations with Washington, which for months has tacitly backed
European diplomacy toward Iran while calling for tougher action at the
United Nations.

President George W. Bush said Thursday that Iran had responded with
defiance and delay to demands to halt its enrichment of uranium.
American officials, meanwhile, have pressed for the Security Council
to consider gradual, narrowly aimed sanctions against Iran, beginning
with relatively symbolic steps such as bans on travel by Iranian
nuclear officials, but building to more substantial measures like
financial restrictions and trade embargoes.

European officials said the union was united over the need to exhaust
diplomatic avenues toward Iran first, and that Britain and France both
argued that sanctions should be kept at arm's length.

France said the world could not accept Iran's nuclear activities,
while Italy identified Iran as one of the world's chief challenges.
Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin of France regretted "very
strongly" what he called Iran's insufficient response to the U.N.
resolution, but added that diplomacy had not been exhausted.

"We think it is possible to go forward with dialogue, but it is
important that the international community show Iran the necessity to
change position," Mr. Villepin said after meeting in today Rome with
Prime Minister Romano Prodi of Italy.

Frank-Walter Steinmeier, the German foreign minister, said today that
he was hopeful that negotiations with Iran remain possible. "The most
important thing, something we have succeeded in doing in the past, is
to keep sending in the future the signal that the international
community is united," Mr. Steinmeier said.

American officials have said that they will not seek action against
Tehran before next week, when Javier Solana, the union's commissioner
for foreign affairs, is scheduled to meet with Ali Larijani, Iran's
nuclear negotiator.

"We'll find out in the next several weeks whether we're able to
proceed to sanctions," John Bolton, the American Ambassador to the
United Nations, told CNN today. "We're consulting with European
countries. What we're going to aim at is the leadership of Iran and
the programs involving their nuclear and ballistic missile
capabilities."

Mr. Solana said today that at his meeting with Mr. Larijani, he will
seek clarification of Iran's 21-page response to an international
package of political and economic incentives offered in exchange for
Tehran suspending the uranium enrichment. He stressed that the fact
that Europe is willing to talk did not mean Tehran has "an infinite
time" to continue its nuclear activities.

Mr. Solana's spokeswoman, Christina Gallach, said that despite the
hesitation expressed today about moving ahead quickly with sanctions,
the European Union and the United States remain united on their
approach to Iran. "I don't think the E.U. is parting ways with the
U.S.," Ms. Gallach said. Referring to the Solana-Larijani meeting set
for next week, she said, "No one will bet on us getting everything we
want from the meeting, but we feel it is a positive step." She said
Condoleezza Rice, the American Secretary of State, supported the plan
for the meeting.

Still, a senior European diplomat who spoke only on condition of
anonymity said that the union was nearly unanimous in not wanting to
press for sanctions.

Analysts said that the European Union's stance may amount to playing
"good cop" to Washington's "bad cop" in trying to prod Iran into
compliance, and that there was little chance of the Security Council
quickly punitive measures in any case, since Russia and China oppose
them.

"Sanctions are not on the cards for the time being, so the E.U. is
trying to use a mix of carrots and sticks," said Charles Grant,
director of the Center for European Reform in London. "The E.U. is
also fed up with being strung along by Iran, but for now the only real
option is to keep on talking."

Dan Bilefsky reported from Brussels for this article, and Steven Lee
Myers reported from Moscow.

<http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601101&sid=aoAYfWieo2Ow&refer=japan>
Tanigaki Says Giving Up Iran's Oil Would Be Difficult (Update2)
By Lily Nonomiya

Aug. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Finance Minister Sadakazu Tanigaki said it
would be difficult for Japan to cut off Iranian oil imports should the
United Nations impose sanctions against Iran for its nuclear
development program.

Japan is seeking to exempt oil from economic sanctions that the UN
would impose upon Iran if the country doesn't abandon the program, the
Yomiuri newspaper said on Aug. 21, without saying where it got the
information. Japan gets about 14 percent of its petroleum from Iran,
making it the third largest supplier of oil to Japan. Iran yesterday
said it is ready to hold negotiations on nuclear development.

``Given Japan's high reliance on Iran for oil, it won't be so easy for
Japan's economy to stop'' importing it, Tanigaki said in a speech to
the Foreign Correspondents Club of Japan in Tokyo. ``While the issue
of nuclear non-proliferation is very important for Japan, securing
sufficient oil supplies is in the national interest.''

Tanigaki on July 27 announced his candidacy to succeed Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi in elections next month. The finance minister trails
in the polls behind Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe and Foreign
Minister Taro Aso in the Sept. 20 election for the head of the ruling
Liberal Democratic Party.

The winner becomes prime minister because of the party's parliamentary majority.

Abe, who has not officially announced, has 53 percent support in a
Asahi newspaper poll published today, while Aso, who officially
declared his candidacy this week, has 14 percent. Tanigaki had 10
percent support in the poll of 836 voters, which gave no margin of
error.

`Abnormal' Relations

Tanigaki reiterated that Japan's relations with China and South Korea
have are ``abnormal'' now and need to be improved. He said that
Japan's friendly ties with the U.S. can't solve Japan's political
issues with Asian nations.

``The Japan-U.S. alliance is a key one and should continue to be so,''
Tanigaki said. ``We certainly cannot conclude that smooth relations
between Japan and the U.S. will solve all our problems.''

Relations with China and South Korea have deteriorated partially due
to Koizumi's visits to Yasukuni Shrine, which Japan's two biggest
Asian trading partners say glorifies Japanese militarism. Koizumi
visited the shrine for the sixth time since becoming premier on Aug.
15, the anniversary of the end of World War II.

Tanigaki said on Aug. 4 that he won't visit Yasukuni if he becomes
prime minister.

To contact the reporter on this story: Lily Nonomiya in Tokyo at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Last Updated: August 23, 2006 02:31 EDT
--
Yoshie
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>
<http://mrzine.org>
<http://monthlyreview.org/>

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