Special Report: Iran Nuclear Crisis
Related: Iran offers new formula in nuclear
response
WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 (Xinhua) -- The United States and
its allies were considering whether to push for sanctions on Iran within the UN
Security Council after the Islamic republic refused to freeze its uranium
enrichment program, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday.
Iran delivered its response on Tuesday to a package
of incentives, offered in June by Britain, China, France, Russia, the United
States and Germany. Iran called for more talks to settle the nuclear issue, but
refused to halt uranium enrichment, a key demand by the Security Council.
U.S. and European officials said in private that
Iran's reply had fallen short of the requirements set out in the Security
Council resolution.
However, the Bush administration held to its official
line that the United States was still evaluating Iran's reply to the package,
and that the administration needed to confer with its European partners on the
issue, the report said.
John Bolton, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations,
said on Tuesday that Washington would study Iran's response carefully.
However, "we are also prepared, if it does not meet
the terms set (by the six major powers), to proceed in the Security Council with
economic sanctions," Bolton said.
"I think we will be prepared to submit the elements
of a resolution in the council very quickly," Bolton added.
The UN Security Council has demanded that Iran stop
its uranium enrichment by August 31, or it would face possible sanctions.
The United States has accused Iran of trying to
develop nuclear weapons under the cover of a civilian nuclear program. Iran has
repeatedly said its nuclear program was aimed at generating power to meet its
surging domestic demand. Enditem