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Iran "could cancel uranium deal over sanctions"

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TEHRAN | Thu May 20, 2010 1:59pm EDT

TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iran could cancel its agreement with Turkey and Brazil to transfer some of its uranium abroad if the U.N. Security Council approves a new round of sanctions against it, a member of parliament said on Thursday.

Brazil and Turkey brokered a surprise deal this week in which Iran agreed to send some low-enriched uranium abroad in return for fuel rods for a medical research reactor. The first batch is due to arrive in Turkey within a month.

Such an arrangement was first suggested as a way of allowing the international community to keep track of nuclear material the West suspects Iran wants to use in nuclear weapons.

Turkey, Brazil and Iran have urged a halt to talk of further sanctions because of the deal, but critics describe it as only a tactic to avert or delay sanctions.

Despite the deal, Washington has circulated a draft sanctions resolution, agreed to by all five permanent U.N. Security Council members after months of negotiation.

"If (the West) issues a new resolution against Iran, we will not be committed to Tehran's statement and dispatching fuel outside Iran will be canceled," prominent lawmaker Mohammad Reza Bahonar was quoted as saying by Iran's Mehr news agency.

"Major powers along with the U.N. Security Council have reached consensus about Iran and it is highly probable that in the near future the fourth round of resolutions becomes operational against Iran," Bahonar added.

The new sanctions would target Iranian banks and call for inspection of vessels suspected of carrying cargo related to Iran's nuclear or missile programs.

Iran has previously dismissed the draft resolution as lacking legitimacy and unlikely to come to pass. It says its atomic ambitions are purely non-military and refuses to suspend uranium enrichment.

"The Americans will take their wish to harm the Iranian nation to their graves," President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was quoted as telling military officials on Thursday by state news agency IRNA.

(Reporting by Ramin Mostafavi; writing by Andrew Hammond; editing by Andrew Roche)

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Comments (20)
oracle52 wrote:
The US and it’s allies seem hell-bent on punishing Iran, which has not broken any international laws and has acted within it’s right to pursue nuclear energy, in order to appease Israel, which has and is breaking international laws with it’s squatter policies, apartheid practices and nuclear arsenal.

May 20, 2010 10:54am EDT  --  Report as abuse
wareagleone wrote:
Opportunity for Iran to show the hypocrisy of the west. First continue with the nuclear swap deal with Turkey. Iran should state clearly that any embargo of its shipping is considered an act of war, since they have no weapons program. Should get Russia and China to support this position.

May 20, 2010 11:10am EDT  --  Report as abuse
searider wrote:
Iran never had any intent to follow through with the “swap”. They are just playing for time until they can build and test a nuclear weapon to use as blackmail against its neighbors. The West is not being hypocratic when it sees that Iran is exporting weapons and money to terrorist groups worldwide. Next on the list: nuclear materials and possibly a device….. The iranian people deserve an honest and responsible government. Instead they have inherited a duplicitous and religious fanatic group of despots that think that playing games equals governing…..

May 20, 2010 11:30am EDT  --  Report as abuse
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