Special report:
Iran Nuclear
Crisis
WASHINGTON, Aug 30 (Xinhua)-- Iran has begun
enriching a new batch of uranium just days before a UN deadline for Tehran to
suspend atomic fuel work or face possible sanctions, the Washington Post
reported on Wednesday.
Inspectors with the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) plan to formally disclose the new enrichment work, as well as
additional Iranian nuclear advances, in a report due out on Thursday, the Post
quoted unidentified U.S. and European officials as reporting.
The officials said that Iran's new work involved
small quantities of uranium being enriched to an extremely low level that could
not be used for nuclear weapons, the newspaper reported.
The UN Security Council in July ordered Iran to
suspend uranium enrichment -- a process which can produce fuel for civilian
reactors or material for nuclear bombs by Aug. 31 and cooperate with inspectors
or face consequences.
If Iran complied, U.S. officials said they were
prepared to join talks on Iran's nuclear program and the possibility of future
cooperation.
The officials also warned that they were determined
to impose sanctions against Tehran if it failed to comply, despite reluctance by
Russia and other nations to participate.
Iran has vowed not to stop its nuclear activities,
which it contends are for generating electricity.
"We've seen no indication that Iran intends to comply
with the U.N. Security Council's condition of suspending its nuclear program,"
said Nicholas Burns, U.S. Undersecretary of State, in a interview with the Post.
"Should it not comply by Thursday, and should the
IAEA report confirm Iran's continued efforts to enrich uranium, the U.S. will
move to begin sanctions discussion at the United Nations, and we expect a
sanctions resolution to be passed," Burns said. Enditem