Iran said on Monday it has formally told the UN nuclear watchdog of its plan to produce higher enriched uranium, sparking US and French calls for "strong" sanctions against the defiant Islamic republic.
"Iran's official letter about commencing the 20 percent enrichment activity in order to provide fuel for the Tehran reactor has been handed over to the IAEA," Ali Asghar Soltanieh, Tehran's envoy to the International Atomic Energy Agency, told state-owned television from its Vienna base.
Iran's atomic chief Ali Akbar Salehi announced late on Sunday that Tehran would begin enriching uranium to 20 percent from Tuesday, and that the IAEA would be informed of its decision beforehand.
The announcement was met with a sharp riposte on Monday from world powers, which fear that Iran's nuclear enrichment programme masks a bid to make atomic weapons, despite Tehran insisting its purpose is entirely peaceful.
France's President Nicolas Sarkozy and US Defence Secretary Robert Gates agreed in talks in Paris that "strong" new sanctions must be passed against Iran over its nuclear drive, the French presidency said.
Sarkozy and Gates "agreed that the time has come for the adoption of strong sanctions, in the hope that dialogue will be resumed," an official at the French presidency said.
Gates, whose aides said earlier the United States would ask France to submit a sanctions motion at the council, which it currently chairs, said: "We are very much agreed that action by the international community is the next step."
In Washington, a US official said the plan was "a provocative move in defiance of UN Security Council resolutions."
"The Iranian government knows that this will not meet the humanitarian needs of the Iranian people, and risks creating more regional instability," the official told AFP, on condition of anonymity.
"If the Iranian government takes this step, it would further undermine confidence and raise serious concern about Iran's nuclear intentions."
Ehud Barak, defence minister of Israel which is widely believed to be the Middle East's sole if undeclared nuclear-armed power, told a meeting of his Labour party that new sanctions were needed.
He said Tehran's enrichment decision was "further proof that Iran is deceiving the whole world and the correct response is to begin a determined campaign of decisive and permanent sanctions against Iran."
Neither the United States nor Israel has ruled out taking military action against Iran's nuclear facilities.
IAEA chief Yukiya Amano "noted with concern this decision, as it may affect, in particular, ongoing international efforts to ensure the availability of nuclear fuel for the Tehran research reactor," his agency said.
French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, meanwhile, insisted that Iran does not have the ability to enrich uranium to 20 percent and accused Tehran of "blackmail."
At the IRIS institute for strategic and international relations in Paris, Karim Pakzad saw hardline President Mahmoud Ahaminejad's move as a "bluff, because the Iranian government is weakened domestically."
On the domestic scene, Iran's opposition criticised Ahmadinejad's handling of the crisis.
"On the nuclear issue, which influential nation do we have on our side?" Mir Hossein Mousavi asked in a talk to university students, his website kaleme.org reported on Monday.
"Unlike you, we do not agree to proceed with an adventurist policy, to insult them one day and smile at them the next," he said.
Germany and Britain on Monday also warned of fresh sanctions, while Russia, a close ally of Iran, reiterated that Iran should send its uranium abroad for higher enrichment in line with a UN-brokered deal.
Salehi's announcement of plans to enrich uranium to 20 percent — the level required for reactor fuel — came just hours after he was ordered on Sunday to do so by Ahmadinejad.
"The higher enrichment will begin at the Natanz plant from the day after tomorrow (Tuesday)," Salehi said.
Iran's main uranium enrichment facility is in the central city where it has continued sensitive atomic work defiantly for years despite three rounds of UN sanctions.
Soltanieh told the official IRNA news agency that Iran's letter to the IAEA invited the agency's inspectors "to be present at the site, since all nuclear activities of the Islamic republic are under the IAEA supervision."
Atomic chief Salehi, however, said Tehran would stop further enrichment if the long-negotiated UN-drafted deal with world powers is concluded.
Gates in Paris as West faces Iranian nuclear defiance
Paris (AFP) Feb 8, 2010 –
France's President Nicolas Sarkozy was to meet US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates in Paris on Monday as the western allies sought a tough response to Iran's latest nuclear provocation.
Washington is also pushing Paris to boost its troop numbers in Afghanistan, but Gates' agenda is expected to be dominated by the international community's stand-off with Tehran over its plan to produce enriched nuclear fuel.
The US secretary was due to arrive in Paris from Rome just as Iran formally announces to the United Nations' atomic watchdog that it plans to enrich its own uranium stocks to a level suitable for use in a medical reactor.
France and the United States believe Tehran plans to increase its refining capability until it is ready to produce the kind of highly enriched uranium that it would need to build an atomic weapon.
Both allies — members of the six-strong international contact group set up to deal with Iran — have been pushing for stronger international sanctions, aiming to force President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to back down.
On Sunday, following Ahmadinejad's announcement that Iran is ready to begin enriching its uranium stockpile to 20 percent strength this week, Gates called for mounting international pressure on Iran.
"The international community has offered the Iranian government multiple opportunities to provide reassurance of its intentions. The results have been very disappointing," Gates said in Rome.
This month France holds the rotating presidency of the United Nations Security Council, and Washington hopes to see Paris use this position to introduce a strong motion calling for action against Tehran.
But the allies fear that fellow veto-wielding permanent council member China could torpedo tougher action, especially as Beijing was angered last week by Washington's decision to sell military equipment to Taiwan.
"France has been taking a very tough stance on Iran," a senior US official in Gates' party told AFP. "We want to take up the resolution while the French are chairing the UN Security Council.
"We have a bit of friction with China because of Taiwan. We have to mobilise our friends."
Gates is to meet French Defence Minister Herve Morin before his talks with Sarkozy later Monday, and is also expected to see Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner before flying home on Tuesday.
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