PRAGUE, 13 February 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Iran has postponed talks on a Russian offer to enrich Iran's uranium in Russia. The decision comes a day after Iran's president warned Tehran could withdraw from an international nuclear nonproliferation treaty.
Iranian government spokesman Gholam Hossein Elham said the negotiations in Moscow had not been cancelled, but said that the date of the talks, which had been scheduled for 16 February, "should be discussed."
Elham said the reason for the postponement was that the proposal needs to be adjusted to incorporate "new elements." He gave no details.
Elham added that Tehran will only accept Russia's plan as a supplement to enrichment activities inside Iran.
Russian Proposal Has EU, U.S. Support
Elham's announcement came after Iran's Foreign Ministry had repeatedly said that the talks in Moscow would be held on the planned date.
The news comes as AFP and Reuters are quoting diplomats in Vienna as saying that Iran has already begun the process of enriching uranium.
Russia's offer to enrich Iranian uranium is an attempt to allay Western fears that Iran could be seeking to produce nuclear weapons. The European Union and the United States have given Russia's proposal conditional and cautious support.
Moscow's proposal has been widely regarded as a realistic way of ending the diplomatic deadlock over Iran's controversial nuclear program.
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Kislyak responded to the postponement by saying that he hoped the talks would go forward, adding that Moscow is still ready to receive Iranian officials on 16 February.
A Show Of Defiance
Tehran's stance in the dispute has toughened since 4 February, when the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) voted to report Iran to the UN Security Council over its nuclear program.
Iran's government has been arguing that Western powers are using the IAEA as a political foil against Tehran's ambitions.
Speaking on 12 February, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Assefiurged the world not "to use the International Atomic Energy Agency as a political power to pressure certain countries, including Iran."
Assefi said Iran would "act based on our responsibilities within the framework of the NPT [Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty] and the safeguards agreement" that were later added to the NPT.
A day earlier, on 11 February, Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad suggested that Iran could pull out of the NPT altogether. "The Islamic Republic's policy has been to follow its nuclear efforts in the framework of the [International Atomic Energy] Agency and the NPT," Ahmadinejad said at a rally in Tehran celebrating the 27th anniversary of the Islamic Revolution. "However, if we find out they are going to take advantage of these regulations to destroy the rights of the Iranian people, you should know that the Iranian nation will reconsider its policy."
Following North Korea?
The NPT was established to promote cooperation in the peaceful use of nuclear energy, as well as to prevent the spread of nuclear arms. It also works towards scaling back existent nuclear arsenals.
The NPT has nearly 190 signatories, Iran included. Signatories agree not to seek nuclear weapons and in return can receive international help to develop nuclear power for peaceful purposes.
Withdrawing from the NPT would allow a country to develop nuclear energy, and possibly nuclear weapons, without inspections.
The first country to pull out of the NPT was North Korea in early 2003. Some states that have nuclear weapons, such as India and Pakistan, have never signed the treaty.
(compiled from agency reports)