Thursday, February 16, 2012

Despite the Bluster From Iran , It Doesn't Actually Appear To Have Cut Exports Yet !

http://www.tehrantimes.com/politics/95502-responsibility-for-oil-embargo-will-rest-with-eu-iran-says


TEHRAN – An Iranian Foreign Ministry official has said that the European Union will be responsible for the consequences of its illogical decision to impose oil embargo against Iran.
Hassan Tajik, the director of the Foreign Ministry’s Western Europe Department, made the remarks on Wednesday in comments on separate meetings that he held with ambassadors of Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece, the Netherlands, and France, in which a range of issues, including the oil embargo that the EU imposed on Iran on January 23, were discussed. 
Dismissing the news reports saying that Iran has halted oil exports to a number of European countries, Tajik said, “Oil exports have not been halted yet, and we have made efforts to… inform European people of the fact that European governments will be responsible for the consequences of the decision.”  
An informed official at the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) told the Persian service of the Mehr News Agency on Wednesday that Iran has halted oil exports to the Netherlands and France and has given an ultimatum to Italy, Spain, Portugal, and Greece.  
“The Islamic Republic of Iran has stopped oil exports to France and the Netherlands,” the unidentified official said.  
The official added that the NIOC has given an ultimatum to Italy, Spain, Portugal, and Greece to extend their long-term contracts, saying, “If these countries ignore the ultimatum, Iran’s oil exports to these countries will be cut as well.” 
Iranian Oil Minister Rostam Qasemi announced on January 29 that Iran would cut oil exports to “certain countries” in the near future. 
The Iranian parliament has also prepared a plan calling for a halt to Iran’s oil exports to the European Union states that voted for sanctions on the country’s oil industry, which will reportedly be discussed in the parliament after Iran’s next parliamentary election, which is scheduled to be held on March 2.
Netherlands not keen to impose sanctions on Iran  
Before his meeting with Tajik, the Dutch ambassador to Tehran, C.J. Kole, told reporters that the Netherlands is not keen to impose sanctions on Iran over its nuclear program and that it would be better if the issue is resolved through the Islamic Republic’s cooperation with international organizations. 


and compare the Glob & Mail piece ....


Tehran threatened to cut oil shipments to winter-gripped Europe and boasted of greater nuclear prowess Wednesday, escalating the confrontation with America and other western countries that suspect Iran of covertly developing atomic weapons.
“The era of bullying nations has past,” Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad warned at an elaborately-staged ceremony in Tehran touting Iran’s enhanced uranium-enrichment capacity. The event also featured the Islamic republic’s first fuelling of a research reactor with an Iranian-made fuel rod.

More worrisome than the fuel rods at an internationally-inspected site were claims of upgrades in Tehran’s murky enrichment program. Mr. Ahmadinejad said there had been “very big new achievement” in putting more than 3,000 additional centrifuges to work.
Although there is no evidence that Iran has done so, arrays of centrifuges would speed any effort to produce highly-enriched, weapons-grade uranium.
Iran’s threat to cut oil exports to European nations – many of which had previously announced they would stop buying oil from Tehran on July 1 – sent a shudder through international oil markets in the wake of initial reports that exports had actually been halted. Oil prices spiked to a six-month high.
Europeans will have only themselves to blame if Tehran looks for new markets for its oil, said Hassan Tajik, a senior Iranian foreign ministry official, after calling in the Dutch, French, Greek Italian, Portuguese and Spanish ambassadors.
“Europe is in a difficult economic condition and is facing a harsh winter,” he said, adding, “We can instantly replace oil customers.”
Washington dismissed Tehran’s newest round of threats as empty posturing. These are “provocative acts, defiant acts, statements that are designed to distract attention from the demonstrated impact that the sanctions are having,” said Jay Carney, President Barack Obama’s spokesman.

Iran, long hostile to the United States which it routinely dubs the ‘Great Satan,’ insists its ambitious nuclear program is entirely peaceful and intended only for power generation and creating medical isotopes.
Unconvinced, the Obama administration has tightened sanctions on Tehran and the two nations have lurched towards armed confrontation in recent months.
Mr. Obama has made it clear he could resort to military force if necessary to prevent Tehran’s ruling mullahs from tipping their missiles with nuclear warheads.
In his latest outburst, President Ahmadinejad denounced the United States, saying “arrogant powers cannot monopolize nuclear technology” and vowed that “our nuclear path will continue. He also announced that the massive, mostly-buried nuclear site at Natanz, would be renamed after Mostafa Ahmadi-Roshan, one of at least four Iranian nuclear scientists assassinated in the last two years. Tehran accuses Israel and the United States of the killings.
His statement came only hours after a new American show of naval power off Iran’s coast. The nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln, with more than 90 warplanes on board and escorted by guided-missile cruisers and destroyers, sailed through the Strait of Hormuz.
After Iran threatened to close the Straits of Hormuz, the narrow international waterway through which vast flows of oil are exported in a steady stream of hulking tankers, the Obama administration had sent the Lincoln into the Gulf with more than usual fanfare. British and French warships then joined the American battle group to show solidarity.
Small, fast, Iranian naval launches, crewed by special units of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, routinely harass and shadow American naval battle groups in the Gulf but naval officials said the Lincoln’s most recent transit was unmolested.

After the transit by another of America’s massive aircraft carriers, the USS John C. Stennis in December, Iran’s military chief had warned it should never return.
Canadian warships have, from time to time, deployed with U.S. carrier battle groups in the Persian Gulf and Arabian Sea but Ottawa hasn’t sent a frigate to the region since 2010.
Yet, on a day when the drumbeats of defiance sounded from both Tehran and Washington, there was also, an odd, quiet, indicator that talks might resume.
According to another semi-official Iranian news agency, Tehran has told Catherine Ashton, the European Union’s top foreign policy official, that it is prepared for new nuclear talks with the world’s major powers, including Britain, France, China, Germany, Russia and the United States.
On-again, off-again talks have failed to reach any resolution on bringing Iran’s nuclear activities within an international inspection regime.

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