Iran rejects nuclear inspections
unless Israel
allows them
Iran rejects nuclear inspections
unless Israel
also submits to international safeguards
http://wiredispatch.com/news/?id=155839
An Iranian envoy said Monday
his government will not submit to extensive nuclear inspections while Israel stays
outside the global treaty to curb the spread of atomic weapons.
"The existing double
standard shall not be tolerated anymore by non-nuclear-weapon states," Ambassador
Ali Asghar Soltanieh told a
meeting of the 190 countries that have signed the Nuclear Nonproliferation
Treaty.
Nuclear safeguards are far
from universal, he said, adding that more than 30 countries are still without a
comprehensive safeguard agreement with the International Atomic Energy Agency
to ensure full cooperation with that U.N. body.
"Israel, with
huge nuclear weapons activities, has not concluded" such an agreement or
submitted its facilities to the IAEA's safeguards, Soltanieh said.
Israel, which
does not discuss whether it has atomic weapons, did not sign the
nonproliferation treaty, which requires all signatories except the major powers
to refrain from obtaining nuclear arms. India
and Pakistan,
which have developed nuclear weapons, also are not signatories.
Iran did sign the treaty and is
under U.N. Security Council sanctions meant to pressure the Tehran government into allowing inspections
that will ensure it isn't developing nuclear weapons. Iran insists
its atomic program is peaceful, with the sole goal of using reactors to
generate electricity.
A U.S.
envoy accused Iran
of "provocative and destabilizing activities" and said its leaders
were responsible for leading the country into the sanctions imposed by the
Security Council.
"The path of defiance
is also the path of isolation, of continuing and additional sanctions and of
further stunted economic opportunities for a proud and sophisticated people
already suffering from economic turmoil and mismanagement by its regime's leaders,"
said Christopher A. Ford, U.S.
special representative for nuclear nonproliferation.
Ford said Iran joined North
Korea and Syria
in weakening the nonproliferation
treaty.
"This treaty regime
faces today the most serious tests it has ever
faced: the ongoing nuclear
weapons proliferation challenges presented by Iran,
by North Korea and now by Syria,"
Ford said.
Ford cited U.S. intelligence that North Korea was helping Syria in
"secretly constructing a nuclear reactor that we believe was not intended
for peaceful purposes." Syria
denied last week that it was working on an undeclared reactor, which
purportedly was destroyed by an Israeli airstrike
last September.
Soltanieh said nuclear-armed powers
like the United States, Britain and France
are practicing "nuclear apartheid" by denying or restricting peaceful
atomic technology to countries like Iran.
"Access of developing
countries to peaceful nuclear materials and technologies has been continuously
denied to the extent that they have had no choice than to acquire their
requirements for peaceful uses of nuclear energy, including for medical and
industrial applications, from open markets," Soltanieh
said.
This usually means the
material is more expensive, poorer quality and less safe, he said.
Source: AP News