Special report: Iran Nuclear Crisis
TEHRAN, Aug. 1 (Xinhua) -- Iranian parliament's
foreign affairs commission said Tuesday that a UN Security Council resolution
urging Iran to stop uranium enrichment by Aug. 31 was "unacceptable".
"The Security Council resolution is unacceptable and
is shifting the climate down a path which will help no one," the Fars News
Agency quoted Kazem Jalali, a spokesman for the commission, as saying.
The UN Security Council on Monday adopted the
resolution by a vote of 14 to 1. Qatar, the only Arab nation on the Security
Council, cast the only negative vote.
Jalali also warned that the United States would be a
loser if it wants to play a "game" over Iran's nuclear issue.
"The Americans must be sure that Iran will not take
part in a game which it will lose," Jalali said.
"If there were to be a loser, it would be those who
have shifted the Iranian nuclear issue away from dialogue," the spokesman added.
The resolution, adopted after weeks of negotiation,
demands Iran "suspend all enrichment-related and reprocessing activities,
including research and development."
On the insistence of Council members such as Russia
and China, the resolution dropped the threat of immediate sanctions, and
requires the Council to hold further discussions before it considers sanctions.
Explaining Iran's position on the nuclear issue,
Iranian ambassador to the UN Javad Zarif said that Iran are not seeking
confrontation and have showed its readiness to engage in serious and
result-oriented negotiation based on mutual respect and equal footing.
"Iran's peaceful nuclear program poses no threat to
international peace and security and therefore dealing with this issue in the
Security Council is unwarranted and void of any legal basis or practical
utility," he said.
Iran has promised to give an official response by
Aug. 22 to a six-nation proposal which demands Iran suspend enrichment in return
for economic incentives. Enditem