World powers consider steps to Iran sanctions
LONDON, Oct 6 (Reuters) Foreign ministers from six world powers convene in London today to discuss Iran's nuclear programme, with the United States, backed by Britain, suggesting it is time to consider a sanctions resolution against Tehran.
Resistance may come from Russia and China who oppose the sanctions route. Some European countries also say diplomacy must be given more time.
Apart from Germany, the countries meeting in London are veto-wielding United Nations Security Council members.
Four months of talks between European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana and top Iranian nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani have failed to yield a promise from Iran to halt atomic work.
A Bush administration official said today ministers would likely agree on the principle of imposing sanctions on Iran but not approve specific language.
''What we would expect to come from this meeting is the political decision to move to the next step of diplomacy, which is a sanctions resolution,'' said the official, travelling in Iraq with US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
Rice, British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett and representatives from France, Germany, Russia and China will gather for ministerial-level talks from 2130 IST.
A spokesman for the British foreign office, which said earlier this week that work was under way to start drafting a United Nations resolution on sanctions, said the main aim of the meeting was to reach agreement on where to go next.
''This is an opportunity for all parties to meet face to face to assess where we've got to in discussions with Iran and see where we next have to go,'' he said.
URGED TO SOLVE Iran again urged the West on Thursday to solve the dispute through talks but repeated it would not stop uranium enrichment.
Tehran says the programme is only for power generation but the West suspects it wants to make a nuclear bomb.
The talks are expected to break around 2330 IST to make a statement on how they are progressing. Some ministers will then convene again over dinner, depending on their schedules, the foreign office spokesman said.
The meeting will follow discussions earlier in the day between senior officials from their respective countries.
The US official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Reuters the foreign ministers would likely ask their political directors to spend the next several days hammering out specific language on sanctions.
European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana said yesterday the door to dialogue with Tehran should stay open for now.
In New York, Britain's U.N. ambassador Emyr Jones Parry said he expected the Security Council to discuss Iran next week, including non-military sanctions under Article 41 of the UN Charter.
REUTERS SP PM1401


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