Special Report:
Iran Nuclear
Crisis Iran replies to six-nation proposal
PARIS, Aug. 25 (Xinhua) -- French Foreign Minister
Philippe Douste-Blazy on Friday called for dialogue with Iran in a bid to avert
a possible confrontation with Tehran and the Islamic world on the nuclear issue,
the RTL radio reported.
The French minister said holding dialogue with Iran
was necessary, warning of a possible confrontation with Tehran and the Islamic
world if the nuclear issue was not appropriately addressed.
"The worst thing would be to build up a confrontation
between Iran and the Islamic world, and the West," he said.
But Douste-Blazy also said Iran's response to the
six-nation package of incentives was unsatisfactory.
"The response is a very detailed and very complex
21-page document that we're studying with our European, Russian and Chinese
partners," he said.
"Frankly speaking, they [Iranians] say very clearly
that they want negotiations, [but] at the same time that they don't want to
suspend [uranium enrichment and reprocessing activities]. However,[UN]
Resolution 1696 obliges them to suspend all uranium enrichment activities before
Aug. 31," he said.
On Tuesday, Iran's top nuclear negotiator Ali
Larijani hand-delivered the official response to the six-nation package to the
ambassadors from Europe, China and Russia in Tehran, without indicating whether
Iran was prepared to suspend enrichment.
Douste-Blazy stressed on Wednesday that the
resumption of the negotiations on Iran's nuclear dispute depended on Tehran's
suspension of uranium enrichment.
Washington has been accusing Iran of developing
nuclear weapons under the cover of a civilian nuclear program, a charge
repeatedly denied by Tehran.
Iran insists that its nuclear program is aimed at
generating power to meet its surging domestic demand. Enditem