Iran says deal reached to move uranium
Iran has reached a deal to transfer low-enriched uranium off its soil, which observers say is an attempt to avoid international sanctions.
In a deal struck with Turkey and Brazil, Iran said it would export much of its low-enriched uranium to Turkey. In return, Iran would get fuel rods of medium-enriched uranium to use in a Tehran medical research reactor.
The move was seen as an attempt by Iran to prevent a looming round of sanctions from the United Nations. But the nations leading the charge for more punitive action against Iran over its nuclear defiance, including the U.S., were hardly swayed.
White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said in a written statement to the media that Iran still must make clear that its nuclear program is intended only for peaceful purposes "or face consequences, including sanctions."
The UN has already imposed three rounds of financial sanctions on Iran for its refusal to suspend uranium enrichment. The process is key to concerns over its program, because it can produce either low-enriched uranium needed to fuel a nuclear reactor or the highly enriched uranium needed to build a warhead.
Iran's decision to continue its program to enrich uranium to near 20 per cent is a direction violation of existing UN Security Council resolutions, Gibbs said.
The White House spokesman added that the declaration issued out of Tehran is also vague about Iran's willingness to meet as promised with the set of countries working to resolve the nuclear standoff — the U.S, China, France, Russia, Britain and Germany.
An original UN proposal called for the Iranian uranium stockpile to be sent to Russia to be further enriched to 20 per cent, then turned into fuel rods to power a Tehran medical research reactor that produces isotopes for cancer treatment.
The material returned to Iran as rods cannot be processed beyond its lower, safer levels.