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=?UTF-8?Q?Don=E2=80=99t=20threaten=20Iran,=20Carter=20says?=  Magnu-@aol.com
 Oct 02, 2009 08:24 PDT 

_http://cnnwire.blogs.cnn.com/2009/10/01/dont-threaten-iran-carter-says/_
(http://cnnwire.blogs.cnn.com/2009/10/01/dont-threaten-iran-carter-says/)



October 1st, 2009
_Don’t threaten Iran, Carter says_
(http://cnnwire.blogs.cnn.com/2009/10/01/dont-threaten-iran-carter-says/)
Posted: 09:27 AM ET


ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) — The United States and other nations should take a
diplomatic approach toward Iran in negotiations over that nation’s nuclear
program, former President Jimmy Carter said Thursday.
Iran’s nuclear chief and representatives from the five permanent members
of the United Nations Security Council, as well as Germany, started talks
Thursday in Switzerland over a recently revealed nuclear facility in Iran.
Tehran says it is developing its nuclear program for energy purposes, but
many nations believe Iran wants to make nuclear weapons and will be able to
do so in the near future.
The existence of the second uranium enrichment facility prompted U.S.
President Barack Obama and the leaders of Britain and France to publicly chide
the Islamic republic last week at the G-20 summit in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, and threaten further sanctions.
A deliberate approach will work best with Tehran, Carter said.
“I hope and pray that Iran will be induced to permit international
inspectors to come in and observe their entire nuclear program, because what they’
re doing so far is completely legal under the nonproliferation treaty,” the
former president said in an interview with CNN’s Candy Crowley.
“They have a right to purify uranium and plutonium to use for nuclear
power. If Iran is on the borderline, the constant threats that we or the
Israelis are going to attack Iran is the best thing to force them to say, ‘Let’s
defend ourselves.’ I don’t think Iran has made up their mind what to do,
and I think the best thing we can do is engage them and stop making these
idle threats.”
Iran said Tuesday it will allow inspectors from the International Atomic
Energy Agency to inspect the new facility, but it did not offer a timetable
for those visits.
	
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