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NewsNovember 9, 2003

VIENNA, Austria -- Iran will firm up pledges next week to allow snap inspections of suspect nuclear sites and announce when it will suspend uranium enrichment, the head of the U.N. nuclear agency and a top Iranian official said Saturday. Working to deflect the possibility of international sanctions, Mohamed ElBaradei, the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, met with Hasan Rowhani, the head of Iran's Supreme National Security Council...

By George Jahn, The Associated Press

VIENNA, Austria -- Iran will firm up pledges next week to allow snap inspections of suspect nuclear sites and announce when it will suspend uranium enrichment, the head of the U.N. nuclear agency and a top Iranian official said Saturday.

Working to deflect the possibility of international sanctions, Mohamed ElBaradei, the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, met with Hasan Rowhani, the head of Iran's Supreme National Security Council.

ElBaradei told reporters afterward that Rowhani reaffirmed Iran's commitment to allowing more intrusive inspections of its nuclear facilities and suspending uranium enrichment. Iran made those pledges under pressure to prove it is not trying to make nuclear arms but had not specified a time frame.

"Next week, we will get a letter from Iran on the conclusion of the additional protocol," which -- if approved by Iran's parliament -- would allow IAEA inspectors to probe nuclear activities hitherto off-limits, ElBaradei told reporters. Rowhani also promised a letter next week "on Iran's agreement to suspend all enrichment activities and reprocessing activities," ElBaradei said.

Asked for a firm date on the start of a moratorium on uranium enrichment, Rowhani said he would announce that next week.

"Iran is determined to make sure that the international community is assured of the peaceful nature of its programs," he said.

Report coming soon

The meeting between ElBaradei and Rowhani came only days before ElBaradei is to release a report to the IAEA board of governors on Tehran's nuclear activities.

Diplomats familiar with the agency, who asked for anonymity, said the IAEA would likely receive the two letters by Monday, in time for ElBaradei to include them in his report.

The IAEA board plans to meet Nov. 20 to scrutinize the report and weigh charges by the United States and its allies that Iran is running a clandestine weapons program.

If the board meeting decides that the report justifies declaring Tehran in violation of the Nonproliferation Treaty, meant to stop the spread of nuclear arms, it would refer the issue to U.N. Security Council, which could impose sanctions.

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Under international pressure, Iran gave the agency what it said was a complete declaration of its nuclear activities just days ahead of an Oct. 31 deadline.

Tehran promised weeks ago to suspend its enrichment activities, a key concern.

It maintains that it has enriched uranium only to non-weapons levels, as part of purely peaceful nuclear programs meant to generate electricity.

While acknowledging IAEA finds of traces of highly enriched, weapons-grade uranium on its enrichment centrifuges, it says the "contamination" originated outside Iran and was inadvertently imported with the equipment bought abroad.

Diplomats say the United States and its allies will seize on any ambiguity in ElBaradei's report concerning enrichment and other suspicious activities in pushing at the board meeting to have Iran declared in noncompliance with the Nonproliferation Treaty.

Rowhani on Saturday suggested that the United States would not have much of a case.

"All remaining questions have been answered by Iran," he said, asserting that both he and ElBaradei "concluded that ... (Tehran) has completely disclosed its past (nuclear) activities."

Asked if that was so, ElBaradei said that his agency has had "satisfactory cooperation" with Iran but suggested that work remained to be done, saying that "full transparency" on the nature of Iran's nuclear program had not yet been achieved.

"I think we are moving together to try and resolve all remaining issues," he said.

IAEA spokesman Mark Gwozdecky said that the agency "could not pass judgment ... until we have independently verified the accuracy" of the evidence provided by Iran on its nuclear activities, adding: "That could take months."

From Vienna, Rowhani was to fly to Moscow. A senior State Department official in Washington said earlier this week on condition of anonymity that Russia may be ready to halt a $800 million deal with Tehran to build a reactor for a power plant if Iran backtracks on its commitment to clear up suspicions about its nuclear activities.

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