U.S. to share Iran nuclear program concerns with Russia, China

U.S. to share Iran nuclear program concerns with Russia, China

PanARMENIAN.Net - U.S. President Barack Obama will personally impress upon the leaders of Russia and China deep concerns over a UN watchdog's report that Iran has worked on nuclear weapons systems.But Moscow and Beijing are cool to a U.S. call for more sanctions on Tehran following the release of the International Atomic Energy Agency report which heightened fears of Israeli military action against Iranian nuclear sites.

Obama will get his first chance to discuss the report with President Dmitry Medvedev of Russia and China's President Hu Jintao in his native Hawaii in bilateral meetings on the eve of an Asia-Pacific economic summit.

Ben Rhodes, a deputy U.S. national security advisor, said Friday, Nov 11 that the president would seek international consensus on new action against Tehran.

"I think the report just recently came out. I think everybody needs to take the time to review the report," he said, when asked about vehement Russian criticism of the study.

"We will want to communicate directly with the Russians about our concerns with the report," said Rhodes, who told reporters aboard Air Force One that Obama would also bring up the issue in talks with Hu.

Rhodes also signaled however that should UN Security Council permanent members Russia and China oppose further multi-lateral sanctions on Iran, Washington would seek to build support for sanctions elsewhere.

He said Washington would work with "likeminded states" to tighten a sanctions regime which U.S. officials believe has brought the Iranian economy to a near standstill.

Tehran denies its program is meant to produce nuclear weapons. The IAEA report however said there was "credible" evidence to doubt its denials.

Russia's foreign ministry said on Tuesday it would take its time assessing the report. But Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov made clear that Moscow would resist the tougher sanctions no matter what the UN report said.

"Any additional sanctions against Iran will be interpreted by the international community as a means of changing the regime in Tehran," Gatilov told Interfax.

China also appears to be reluctant to permit further UN sanctions on Iran, after foreign ministry spokesperson Hong Lei said Thursday such measures "cannot fundamentally solve the Iran issue."

"Dialogue and negotiation are the right way out for the Iranian nuclear issue," he told reporters, according to AFP.

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