http://www.aljazeera.com/news/europe/2012/01/201211382815875531.html
| Russia warns US over Iran oil sanctions | |||
Moscow says tougher sanctions would be seen as attempt at "regime change" as Iran voices willingness to return to talks. Last Modified: 14 Jan 2012 04:16 | |||
Gannady Gatilov, Russia's deputy foreign minister, told a press conference on Friday that additional sanctions or military strikes against Iran would "unquestionably be perceived by the international community as an attempt at changing the regime". Gatilov's comments came as Washington imposed new restrictions on companies from China, Singapore and the UAE over their ties to Iranian oil. European governments also said they were moving closer to an agreement on an oil embargo that would give companies six months to phase out contracts with Tehran. Russia has backed four rounds of UN Security Council sanctions against its regional ally, while calling for the utmost restraint in the West's escalating tensions with Iran. Gatilov said new sanctions would only undermine the world community's efforts at peacefully resolving the dispute over Iran's nuclear ambitions. 'IAEA inspection' Diplomats told the AFP news agency on Friday that Iran had agreed to a high-level visit by UN nuclear inspectors, most likely in the last week of January. The visit would probably be led by Herman Nackaerts, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) chief inspector, and could take place this month, one Western diplomat said. Another said the trip, which comes after a November report by the IAEA raised questions over Iran's nuclear plans, would "very likely" be in the last week of this month. Iran's parliamentary speaker on Thursday said he believed that the standoff could be solved through serious talks. Larijani told a news conference, after meeting Turkish leaders in Ankara, that Tehran supported the idea of holding further talks in Turkey. Meanwhile, the New York Times reported that the US had used a secret channel to warn Iran's leaders against closing the strategic Strait of Hormuz, saying that doing so would provoke a US response.Iran has threatened to close the narrow and strategic waterway, an artery for 20 per cent of the world's oil supplies, in the event of a military strike or severe tightening of international sanctions. The New York Times, citing unnamed US officials, said the White House had communicated to Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei that closing the strait would be a "red line" and provoke a response. The US and some of its allies have stepped up increasingly harsh sanctions on Iran over its nuclear enrichment programme, which they have charged is part of a secret drive to develop nuclear weapons.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment