• Published 19:57 07.10.09
  • Latest update 05:07 08.10.09

Iran: France may be ready to sell us uranium, U.S. should too

Ahmadinejad urges France to make official proposal, says some states offering it 20% enriched uranium.

By News Agencies Tags: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad UN Iran nuclear Israel news

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Wednesday that some states - including France - had offered to provide his country with uranium enriched to 20 percent for use as nuclear reactor fuel, the official IRNA news agency reported.

Iran has always insisted on its right to carry out its own enrichment of uranium for a nuclear program which it says is for purely peaceful purposes, mainly to generate electricity. It rejects Western suspicions its real aim is to build an atomic bomb, which would require uranium enriched to around 90 percent.

"There have been some proposals by individual countries and groups of countries. We are ready to hold talks with anyone interested. Our experts will soon start talks with those sellers," Ahmadinejad said.

He said Iran could also buy nuclear fuel from the United States, its old enemy. "We want to buy fuel. We can buy it from anywhere and America can be a seller," ISNA news agency quoted him as saying.

Uranium enrichment is at the heart of a long standoff between Iran and the West, which took a new twist last month when Tehran disclosed the existence of a previously secret underground enrichment plant near the holy Shi'ite city of Qom.

Diplomats say it did so after learning Western intelligence services had discovered the site.

Russia stepped into the debate on Wednesday, urging countries not to jump to hasty conclusions about the newly revealed plant and saying Iran was showing signs of cooperation with inspectors.

Russia's Foreign Ministry complained of media speculation surrounding activities at the site. "We are convinced that hasty conclusions on this score will not benefit the objective assessment of the situation," it said in a statement.

Western concerns center on the possibility that Iran could accumulate supplies of enriched uranium and divert them from its civilian program in order to built a nuclear warhead.

To address this, Western diplomats say Iran agreed in principle at talks last week in Geneva to send about 80 percent of its stockpile of low-enriched uranium to Russia and France for processing. It would then be returned to Tehran to replenish dwindling fuel stocks for a reactor in the capital that produces isotopes for cancer care.

Ahmadinejad made no mention of Iran sending its uranium abroad for further enrichment. So far no purchasing agreement had been finalized, he said.

"Representatives of some countries have said that France is ready to provide nuclear fuel for the Tehran reactor ... they [France] should officially propose it, then we will review it," state broadcaster IRIB quoted the president as saying.

IRNA quoted Ahmadinejad as saying last week's talks with six world powers - the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany - in Geneva "were constructive and a positive step forward."

The talks are expected to win Iran a reprieve from tougher UN sanctions, although Western powers are likely to be wary of any attempt by Tehran to buy time to develop its nuclear program.

Iran also agreed with the six powers in Geneva to allow access for inspectors of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to the newly disclosed nuclear site at Qom.

Subsequent talks with IAEA Director General Mohamed ElBaradei in Tehran on October 3 and 4 sent out a positive signal from Tehran, the Russian Foreign Ministry said.

"We see this as an instance of practical implementation of the agreements on strong cooperation between Iran and the IAEA in clarifying the circumstances of the construction," it said.

World powers at the next round of talks aim to press Iran for a freeze on expansion of enrichment as an interim step towards a suspension that would bring it major trade rewards. Iran has repeatedly rejected such demands.

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  • 3. 0 0
    We Must Sell Iran Night Soil!
    • Yosemite
    • 08.10.09
    • 06:27

    It's not clean. It's not combustible. It just stinks!

  • 2. 0 0
    Iranian Hipocracy Theocracy
    • shlomo
    • 08.10.09
    • 04:20

    If Iran were honest about it's nuclear intentions, it would have attempted to buy material and technology and plants from the beginning, instead of dispersing and secretively procurring help which is indicative of military goals. Now, at the last minute they are pretending it is all for peace and are willing to buy ready enriched uranium. They've been unmasked, but intend to continue developing weapons. The wise people know, those that want to be fooled continue to fool themselves. The Ayatollah's should go back to the mosques and leave politics to secular humanists so Iran can fulfill it's full human potential and not destructive goals..

  • 1. 0 0
    Eurodif
    • Henk
    • 08.10.09
    • 02:10

    Since the 1970s Iran is one of the shareholders of the uranium enrichment consortium Eurodif. There are no legal objections to deliveries from France to Iran (as well as Iran want to enrich uranium by themselves).