Drift into war with Iran out of control, says UN
by Julian Borger
The UN's chief nuclear weapons inspector warned against the use of
force against Iran, in what UN officials said was an attempt to halt an
"out of control" drift to war. His outspoken remarks, which drew a
parallel between Iran and Iraq, appeared to take aim at the US and
Britain.
They followed comments on Sunday night by the French foreign
minister, Bernard Kouchner, who said: "We have to prepare for the
worst," adding "the worst is war".
"I would not talk about any use of force," Mohamed ElBaradei told
reporters at the International Atomic Energy Agency headquarters in
Vienna.
"There are rules on how to use force, and I would hope that everybody
would have gotten the lesson after the Iraq situation, where 700,000
innocent civilians have lost their lives on the suspicion that a country
has nuclear weapons."
There has been a string of reports out of Washington that the Bush
administration is running out of patience with diplomacy and is
intensifying its plans for air strikes as a means of halting Iran's
disputed nuclear programme.
UN officials said Mr ElBaradei, an Egyptian diplomat who was awarded
the Nobel peace prize in 2005, was attempting to slow down what seemed
to be an accelerating march to war.
"There's a strategic reason for doing these things," one official
said. "He really is alarmed. He sees this thing going out of control.
The feeling around here is that this looks like the run-up to the Iraq
war."
Last month, the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, sparked a heated
political debate in Paris when he called the Iranian stand-off "the
greatest crisis" of current times, saying the world had "a catastrophic
alternative: an Iranian bomb or the bombing of Iran".
Following Mr Kouchner's comments, Tehran denounced France's stance on
the nuclear issue, which has toughened since Mr Sarkozy's election in
May. Iran's state-owned news agency IRNA published an editorial accusing
Paris of "extremism" and pandering to Washington. "The new occupants of
the Elys‚e want to copy the White House," it said, accusing Mr Sarkozy
of taking on "an American skin".
Iran insists on its right to run a comprehensive nuclear programme,
including the enrichment of uranium, which it says is intended for
peaceful electricity generation. The US has called a meeting of senior
European and Russian officials in Washington on Friday to discuss the
deepening crisis over Iran.
Britain, the US and France are likely to push for more sanctions over
Iranian defiance, while Russia and China are expected to resist,
pointing to a deal Mr ElBaradei struck with the Iranian government last
month, in which Tehran agreed to answer unresolved questions over its
nuclear programme.
The US, Britain, France and Germany complained to Mr ElBaradei that
they had not been consulted and that the agreement did not mention the
UN Security Council's demand that Iran suspend uranium enrichment while
its programme is assessed.
In their eyes, the deal gave Tehran a means of stalling new sanctions
while continuing to produce nuclear fuel. France is determined that if
the UN is unable to agree on a new round of sanctions against Iran, the
European Union should impose its own. Mr Kouchner said leading French
companies such as Total and Renault had been urged not to sign new
contracts with Iran, and he flew to Moscow to try to persuade Russia to
accept a toughening of the embargo.
The Guardian ,UK |