US warns Iran as armada enters Gulf
May 24, 2007
THE US today threatened new UN sanctions to punish Iran's nuclear drive as it ratcheted up tensions with the biggest display of naval power in the Gulf in years.
A bristling US armada led by two aircraft carriers steamed into waters near Iran for exercises, hours before UN watchdogs said Iran was expanding its uranium enrichment program in defiance of international sanctions. The International Atomic Energy Agency said that Iran continues to enrich uranium - which can provide fuel for civilian reactors but also make nuclear bombs. That prompted warnings from US officials of further UN punishment unless Iran curtails its nuclear development - which the Islamic republic insists is devoted to civilian energy. "Iran is once again thumbing its nose at the international community," US Under Secretary of State Nicholas Burns said, as US and Iranian envoys prepared for historic talks on Iraqi security in Baghdad next Monday. Iran denied obstructing IAEA inspections, but White House national security spokesman Gordon Johndroe said the report by the UN atomic watchdog was damning. The IAEA assessment "is a laundry list of Iran's continued defiance of the international community and shows that Iran's leaders are only furthering the isolation of the Iranian people", he said. The US Navy said the Gulf exercises were not directed at Iran but Mustafa Alani, senior analyst with the UAE-based Gulf Research Centre, said it was no coincidence the powerful flotilla arrived on the day of the IAEA report. "The aim of this step, which coincides entirely with the end of the UN deadline (to suspend enrichment), is to send a clear message to Iran that a military option is available to Washington," Mr Alani said. The carriers USS John Stennis and USS Nimitz sailed through the Strait of Hormuz into the Gulf along with a helicopter carrier and amphibious assault ships carrying an estimated 2200 marines. "We do maritime security operations here to reassure friends in the region of our commitment, and certainly this is a viable commitment and a visible one that helps security and stability in the waters here," said Commander Kevin Aandahl, a spokesman for the US Fifth Fleet in Bahrain. "From a historic point of view we haven't done this type of operation with this number of ships in a couple of years at least," Commander Aandahl said. "I guess what's significant here is them all coming at the same time." In January, Washington said it planned to keep two carrier battle groups in the Gulf for months - the first such deployment since 2003. Mr Alani said a sudden, unexpected outbreak of hostilities between the US and Iran could be triggered by events in Iraq. Ahead of Monday's talks, the US said Iran was escalating a proxy war against US forces in Iraq as the two nations sparred verbally over a number of their nationals being detained by each other. From Baghdad, US military spokesman Major General William Caldwell told CNN there was "very credible intelligence" that Shiite-majority Iran was funding Sunni extremists in Iraq, including for roadside bombings against US troops. Three days after the Baghdad meeting, at the behest of the UN Security Council's five permanent members plus Germany, European Union foreign envoy Javier Solana is to hold talks with Iranian nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani. Mr Burns said Mr Solana would renew a year-old offer from the powerful nations for Iran to suspend uranium enrichment in return for cooperation on nuclear energy. "Should it turn down the offer again, I would think what you'd see is a strong drive" by the six powers "for a third sanctions resolution," he said.
Friday, May 25, 2007
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