Related: EU's Solana arrives in Tehran to present nuclear proposal
BEIJING, June 6 -- European Union foreign policy
chief Javier Solana will hand Iran a package of incentives today that aim to
persuade Teheran to abandon its plan to make nuclear fuel, a spokeswoman for
Solana said yesterday.
The spokeswoman, speaking in Brussels, said Solana
would fly to Teheran later on Monday (local time) and present his proposals
today.
He was due to meet Iran's chief nuclear negotiator
Ali Larijani to hand over the package, an EU diplomat, who declined to be named,
said in Teheran.
The incentives Solana will deliver to Iran stem from
an initiative put together by the three biggest EU states Britain, France and
Germany and approved by a forum that also included the United States, China and
Russia.
Details of the package have not been announced, but
diplomats have been working on themes ranging from offering nuclear reactor
technology to giving security guarantees.
Western nations fear Iran is enriching uranium to
make an atomic bomb, but Iran insists its aims are entirely peaceful and that it
wants to make fuel only to generate electricity.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on
Saturday Iran would consider incentives but insisted the crux of the package
that Iran must give up uranium enrichment was still unacceptable.
The United States has said Iran was probably staking
out a negotiating position with its tough talk and said it was not taking the
negative comments as a definitive rejection.
Oil weapon
Diplomats in Washington said an arms embargo against
Iran was among the possible sanctions if Iran did reject the offer.
But they said the six powers had pledged to keep
details secret until the package was shown to Iran. This was so Iran did not
feel compelled to reject any or all of the elements as a face-saving gesture if
they were made public first, they said.
The United States has said it wants a diplomatic
solution to the dispute but has refused to rule out military action.
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, supreme leader of the world's
fourth largest oil exporter, said on Sunday that if the United States made a
"wrong move" towards Iran, energy flows in the region would be endangered.
Iranian officials have in the past ruled out using
oil as a weapon in Iran's nuclear standoff with the West, but Khamenei's
comments suggested Iran could disrupt supplies if pushed.
Oil prices climbed more than US$1 to above US$73 a
barrel yesterday after his comments.
Solana arrived in Israel late on Sunday as part of a
previously planned trip.
"He will travel to Teheran this evening and tomorrow
morning he will present the proposals of the international community for opening
negotiations on Iran's nuclear programme," the spokeswoman for Solana said.
(Source: China Daily)