Wednesday 09 May 2007

Iran may face harsher U.N. sanctions in June: U.S.

BERLIN (Reuters) - Iran will face further sanctions in June if it continues to defy U.N. demands that it stop uranium enrichment work, a senior U.S. official said on Wednesday.

Iran has repeatedly stated it would not give up its nuclear fuel program which it says is aimed only at producing electricity. The West suspects Tehran wants to build bombs.

"If Iran doesn't say yes to negotiations ... they're going to find a third Security Council (sanctions) resolution in the month of June," U.S. Under Secretary of State Nicholas Burns told reporters at the U.S. embassy.

The United Nations has imposed two sets of sanctions after Iran rejected resolutions ordering it to freeze nuclear work.

Burns did not give a deadline for Iran to suspend enrichment but said if Tehran had not moved by the Group of Eight (G8) summit in early June, it would be time to increase sanctions.

The United States, Britain, France and Germany have made a full suspension of enrichment work a condition for beginning negotiations. Iran says it wants to negotiate but not if it has to freeze enrichment.

Burns is in Berlin for meetings with political directors from the G8 nations to prepare for the group's summit in Heiligendamm, Germany, and meetings on Iran with Germany and the other four permanent U.N. Security Council members -- Britain, France, Russia and China.

U.S. officials said the six world powers were originally planning to meet on Wednesday to discuss Iran. They will now meet early on Thursday. Among the discussion topics is the possible language for a sanctions resolution, diplomats said.

China would participate via telephone, Burns said.

Among possible sanctions was an increase in the number of Iranian banks to be blacklisted by the United Nations, several diplomats said.

However, German Foreign Ministry spokesman Martin Jaeger said sanctions would not be on the agenda. The powers intended to prepare for the next meeting between EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana and Iranian nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani.

Solana met Larijani recently and said the meeting was very difficult as Iran had said it had no intention of suspending uranium enrichment.

NO INTENTION

One senior official from a G8 country said the draft of a statement on nuclear non-proliferation to be approved at the summit called for increasing pressure on Iran if it remained defiant.

Under the draft, the G8 would "support adopting further measures should Iran refuse to comply with its obligations," said the official, declining to be named.

Germany is the G8 president. Other members are the United States, Russia, Britain, France, Italy, Canada and Japan.

Several diplomats said the major powers were satisfied with the impact sanctions were having and that Iranians were growing increasingly worried about the economic pressures.

But Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi dismissed on Wednesday suggestions sanctions were having an impact.

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