| The EU misleads on Irans nuclear activities |
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David Morrison, February 1, 2006
On 12 January 2006, the EU decided to request the Board of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to refer In almost three years intensive investigation of · Enriching uranium for peaceful purposes is · The EU negotiations with Iran came to an abrupt halt in August 2005 when the EU made proposals [3] that
denied Iran this inalienable right the proposals required Iran to
abandon all processing of domestically mined uranium, not merely
enrichment, and to import all fuel for nuclear power reactors. · The
absence of these facts is understandable since their presence would
seriously undermine the EU case for doing anything other than allowing
the IAEA to continue with its work. All 25 members of the EU are, like As a quid pro quo for this self-denying act, the Treaty guarantees non-nuclear-weapon states, including Nothing
in this Treaty shall be interpreted as affecting the inalienable right
of all the Parties to the Treaty to develop research, production and
use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes without discrimination and
in conformity with Articles I and II of this Treaty. Engaging
in uranium enrichment to fuel nuclear power stations is therefore an
inalienable right guaranteed to all parties to the Treaty. Yet the EU is attempting to prevent Other
non-nuclear-weapon states that are signatories to the Treaty have
uranium enrichment facilities, for example, Japan and Brazil, so
denying Iran such facilities is plainly discrimination against Iran,
contrary to Article IV(1). Duty to assist Article IV(1) establishes the right of states to use nuclear energy for peaceful purposes. Article IV(2) goes further and imposes a duty on other states with appropriate technical know-how to assist: Parties
to the Treaty in a position to do so shall also co-operate in
contributing
to the further development of the applications of
nuclear energy for peaceful purposes, especially in the territories of
non-nuclear-weapon States Party to the Treaty
If
EU states were carrying out their duty under the Article IV(2), those
in a position to do so would be assisting Iran with its nuclear power
programme, rather than trying to block uranium enrichment. Negotiations with the EU The negotiations came to an abrupt halt in August 2005 when the EU proposed [3] to This would mean that nuclear power generation in Resumption of enrichment activities On 12 January 2006, the EU decided to press for It is important to note that this suspension was a voluntary act of goodwill on the part of The E3/EU recognize that this suspension is a voluntary confidence building measure and not a legal obligation
. In the context of this suspension, the E3/EU and To
say, as the EU does in its statement of 12 January 2006, that Iran has
breached the Paris Agreement by restarting suspended activities is
misleading. A mutually acceptable agreement on long term arrangements had not been reached, so it is entirely reasonable for EU in breach of A case can be made for saying that the EU, and not The E3/EU recognise One of will provide objective guarantees that But, the EU proposals of August 2005 do not suggest any such objective guarantees. Instead, they demand that In September 2004,
as a further confidence building measure and in order to provide the
greatest degree of transparency, the Islamic Republic of Iran is
prepared to engage in serious partnership with private and public
sectors of other countries in the implementation of uranium enrichment
program in Iran. This proposal is based on the recommendations [6] of an IAEA expert group, which reported in February 2005. The
group, headed by Bruno Pellaud, was established by the IAEA to
recommend measures that would be useful in giving reassurance that
nuclear facilities for peaceful purposes, which a state has a right to
possess under the NPT, would not be used for weapons development. Of the five proposals made by the committee, two were based on the notion of shared ownership or control. This proposal by No evidence of weapons development The
IAEA is the agency which is charged with ensuring that nuclear activity
by non-nuclear-weapon states is for peaceful purposes. This
is laid down in Article III of the NPT, which requires each such state
to enter into a so-called safeguards agreement with the IAEA with
a view to preventing diversion of nuclear energy from peaceful uses to
nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices. Under
a safeguards agreement a state must, for instance, report prescribed
activities to the IAEA and allow the IAEA access to nuclear sites. Over the past few years IAEA inspectors have conducted intensive investigations of The EU statement on 12 January 2006 does not mention this very important and relevant fact. It does mention that the IAEA Board passed a resolution in September 2005 formally finding that This is misleading, implying as it does that In fact, the resolution [8] passed by the Board in September 2005 didn't declare GOV/2003/75 [9] is a report by Dr Mohamed ElBaradei to the IAEA Board in November 2003 (that is, nearly two years earlier). In other words, the resolution stated that the Director General in his report [10] to the Board on 2 September 2005 noted that good progress has been made in I assume that the US and EU were unable to persuade the IAEA Board in September 2005 to pass a resolution stating plainly that The NPT: a most unusual treaty The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) is a most unusual international treaty, which places diametrically opposite obligations on different states. States
must sign up to it either as nuclear-weapon states, which are allowed
to keep their nuclear weapons and are not obliged to accept IAEA
monitoring of their nuclear activities, or as non-nuclear-weapon
states, which are forbidden to acquire nuclear weapons and are obliged
to accept IAEA monitoring of their nuclear activities. Nuclear weapons are the ultimate weapons of self-defence. States that possess them dont get attacked by other states. Bizarrely, the nuclear-weapon states that are allowed to keep their nuclear weapons are defined in the Treaty itself. Article IX(3) says: For
the purposes of this Treaty, a nuclear-weapon State is one which has
manufactured and exploded a nuclear weapon or other nuclear explosive
device prior to 1 January 1967. 5 states the It
is often said that the nuclear-weapon states are breaking the terms
of the NPT by failing to disarm and, on the contrary, constantly
upgrading their nuclear weapons systems. In fact, the NPT doesnt oblige nuclear-weapon states to disarm. True, Article VI says: Each
of the Parties to the Treaty undertakes to pursue negotiations in good
faith on effective measures relating to cessation of the nuclear arms
race at an early date and to nuclear disarmament, and on a treaty on
general and complete disarmament under strict and effective
international control. But thats a commitment to talk about disarmament, not a commitment to disarm. Some states have chosen not to sign the NPT, for example, Had Article IX of the NPT allows a state to withdraw if
it decides that extraordinary events, related to the subject matter of
this Treaty, have jeopardized the supreme interests of its country. By any objective standard, There
could hardly be a better example of extraordinary events, related to
the subject matter of this Treaty, which have jeopardized [their]
supreme interests. Double standards abound The EU and the At
the same time as it is demanding that Iran abandon uranium enrichment,
the US is offering India access to nuclear materials and equipment for
the expansion of its nuclear power programme (see joint statement here [11] by President Bush and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on 18 July 2005). This offer reverses a 30-year old The supreme irony is that part of the payback the
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