November 05, 2004
Iran: EU 'Big Three' Meet With Tehran Over Nuclear Program
by Charles Recknagel
A suspected nuclear facility in Iran
![]()
Officials from Britain, France, and Germany are meeting with Iranian representatives in Paris today to discuss European incentives aimed at persuading Tehran to end activities that could lead to developing nuclear weapons. The efforts by the three EU powers are being closely watched by Washington. But it is far from clear whether any "grand bargain" to end the Iran nuclear crisis can be reached.
Prague, 5 November 2004 (RFE/RL) -- No breakthroughs are expected from the meeting today in Paris over the British, French, and German plan to end the crisis over Tehran's nuclear activities.
That is because all sides have stated their positions ahead of today's talks and their remarks suggest little room for compromise.
The three major EU powers have underlined they want Iran to commit to a sustained -- that is permanent -- suspension of its efforts to master uranium enrichment because it is a "duel-use" process. The process can produce nuclear-reactor fuel or, at high levels of enrichment, material for nuclear bombs.
But Iranian officials say Iran will not give up its right under international treaties to produce its own reactor fuel. They also say Iran has no interest in nuclear weapons.
Iranian President Mohammad Khatami put Tehran's position this way late last month as he vowed Iran's full cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the UN's nuclear watchdog. "We are ready for complete cooperation and [to reach an] understanding with world and also with IAEA to make sure that Iran's [nuclear] activities would not move toward nuclear weapons."
Still, the Europeans and Iranians are talking because the stakes are high. If the Europeans cannot persuade Iran to commit to a significant suspension of its uranium-enrichment-related work, the EU is expected to support Washington's demand that the UN take a tougher stand against Tehran.
The United States is considered likely to call for the governing board of the IAEA to determine Iran is not fully cooperating in opening its nuclear program to international inspectors when it meets in Vienna on 25 November. Washington is expected to also press the IAEA to refer Iran to the UN Security Council for discussion of possible punitive sanctions.
The Europeans see a deal with Iran as the best way to defuse the crisis and they are offering significant incentives to get one. These include offering Iran access to foreign commercial reactor fuel at concessionary prices and Western nuclear technical assistance. Trade incentives are also being discussed.