Senior officials from the five permanent members of the UN Security Council
and Germany will meet in New York next Monday to discuss the Iran issue, a UN
diplomat told Xinhua yesterday.
According to the diplomat, who asked to remain anonymous, U.S. Under
Secretary of State for Political Affairs Nicholas Burns, Russia's Deputy Foreign
Minister Sergei Kislyak will attend the meeting. Other participants include
senior foreign affairs officials from China and the so-called European Troika --
Britain, France, Germany.
It will be the second meeting of its kind since foreign ministers of the six
countries gathered in London on Jan. 30 and agreed to refer the Iran issue to
the Security Council.
Meanwhile, Britain and France informally briefed the 10 non-permanent members
of the Council Thursday afternoon at the French Mission on the elements of their
draft statement which was circulated Tuesday.
After the briefing, the five permanent members held a new round of
consultation on the language of the draft statement. However, diplomats who
participated in the consultation told Xinhua that the five members still failed
to bridge their differences over how to respond to Iran's nuclear crisis.
The council members are scheduled to hold on Friday their first formal
meeting on the Iran issue, and are expected to express their own opinions on the
text of the draft statement.
After a week of continuous talks since the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) sent its assessment report on Iran's disputed nuclear program to the
Council on March 8, the five veto-wielding members remained divided.
Britain and France proposed in their draft statement a 14-day deadline for
Iran to comply with IAEA's demands to resume suspension of its uranium
enrichment activities. However, Russia only wants a statement stressing the
central role the IAEA has on the Iran issue.