Western powers will reactivate efforts to punish Iran through possible UN Security Council sanctions unless it suspends uranium enrichment and agrees to talks on its nuclear program by July 12, diplomats said on Monday.
The envoys -- some of them senior UN diplomats, and all familiar with details of the six-nation drive to persuade Iran to compromise on its nuclear activities -- spoke just two days before a key Iran-EU meeting in Brussels meant to make clear to the Iranians that their time is running out.
Tomorrow, Senior EU envoy Javier Solana will urge top Iranian nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani to immediately commit his country to suspending enrichment and starting negotiations on the six-power package, the diplomats said.
They also said Russia and China were closer than ever to supporting the West on UN Security Council action -- including sanctions -- if Tehran refuses the package of incentives meant to wean it off enrichment. Still, they suggested it could take time to secure total commitment to sanctions from Moscow and Beijing.
"We are looking forward to hear from Iran ... the official response," said Cristina Gallach, Solana's spokeswoman.
A European official outlined more realistic expectations, saying Larijani would likely come back with questions -- and perhaps a counterproposal.
If so, the diplomats said, Solana plans to tell him Iran must accept the terms of the package by July 12, when foreign ministers of the five permanent Security Council nations and Germany consult in Paris.
"If Iran has not answered positively by this date, the ministers will likely adopt a decision to resume negotiations on the Security Council resolution," said one of the diplomats, who, like the European official, demanded anonymity in exchange for divulging the game plan on Iran.
The European official said Russia and China are contemplating sending high-level officials to tomorrow's meeting in a symbolic show of unity with the West.
In Washington, US Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns told C-Span television, in an interview to be aired on Sunday, that if Iran has not responded by July 12, "then I think the pressure will be enormous on the Iranians from all the international community."
Work on a UN Security Council resolution was suspended on May 3 to allow the six powers to draw up a plan of perks if Iran agrees to a long-term moratorium on enrichment -- or punishments that include the threat of selective UN sanctions if it doesn't. Solana last month presented the rewards to Larijani but made no mention of the punishments, so as not to rile Tehran.
While Iran argues it has a right to the technology under the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty to generate power, there is increasing international concern that it wants to enrich uranium to weapons-grade levels for use in the fissile core of nuclear warheads.
Iranian officials have said they would not respond to the six-power offer before the middle of next month, a gambit described by one of the diplomats as an attempt to stall beyond the July 15 through July 17 summit of the Group of Eight industrialized nations in Russia.
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