Iran freezes nuclear programme

IRAN: Iran yesterday moved to avoid a showdown with the west over its contested nuclear activities by freezing all operations…

IRAN: Iran yesterday moved to avoid a showdown with the west over its contested nuclear activities by freezing all operations connected with the enrichment of uranium into nuclear fuel.

But Tehran, in a further act of the brinkmanship that has characterised its strategy over the past 18 months of argument, waited until the last moment to observe the terms of a deal recently agreed with the EU troika of Germany, France and Britain.

While the Europeans are guardedly optimistic that they can reach a broader agreement with Tehran to end the nuclear row and defuse a potentially bigger crisis, early noises from the second-term Bush administration have been more belligerent over the past week. The US insists that Iran is on a surreptitious nuclear weapons drive and is experimenting with matching its missiles with designs for nuclear warheads.

Nuclear inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency were at Iranian facilities yesterday to verify the uranium freeze.

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Going into a session of the IAEA's 35-strong governing board in Vienna, its chief, Dr Mohamed ElBaradei, confirmed the freeze. "We're just trying to apply seals and make sure everything has been stopped," he told journalists in Vienna. "Pretty much everything has come to a halt right now." The Iranians had until this week's board meeting to freeze the uranium programme or face penalties.

The Europeans would have fallen in line with the Americans for the first time in almost two years of diplomatic battling and taken the issue away from the IAEA and to the higher forum of the UN security council in New York. Referral to the security council would politicise the dispute and could result in sanctions.

Under the terms of the deal, however, the Europeans have promised that the dispute will not go to the security council, isolating the Americans and making it almost impossible for Washington to get its way in Vienna.

The Iranian issue will dominate the Vienna meeting on Thursday and Friday, with the EU three also drafting a resolution on Iran which should dictate the future of the dispute.

Over the weekend, according to informed diplomats, Britain and Germany differed over the wording of the resolution. The Germans wanted a milder tone. The British, with an eye to getting the Americans behind the draft, wanted a formula that included a trigger to automatically refer Iran to the security council should it breach the terms of the agreement reached earlier this month in Paris.

The Europeans showed the draft to the Americans at the weekend. It included compromise language that may not be acceptable to the Americans. There was no automatic trigger; instead, the IAEA was instructed to tell the 35 board members of the agency immediately if any breach of the uranium-enrichment freeze was discovered.

The agreement has been jeopardised in recent days by the news that Iran was rushing to process uranium concentrate into uranium hexafluoride gas ahead of today's deadline. The gas is fed into centrifuges to be enriched into nuclear fuel or fissile material for warheads.

As recently as the weekend, Tehran dismissed the reports of uranium conversion as "lies".

But the conversion was confirmed by Dr ElBaradei yesterday, effectively declaring that Tehran had lied at the weekend. Dr ElBaradei said Iran had produced two tonnes of the gas known as UF6.

Yesterday's suspension and the interim agreement with the EU brings a truce to the 18-month dispute, but it remains to be seen whether that will be turned into a durable ceasefire.

The uranium freeze is supposed to continue until the EU and Iran agree a broader pact on nuclear, economic, trade, and political cooperation.