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Ambassadors (from left) Jean Pierre Lacroix of France, John Sawers of Britain, and Thomas Matussek of Germany faced the media in New York after the UN Security Council voted. (David Karp/associated press) |
UN's nuclear sanctions against Iran extended
Action falls short of penalty sought by White House
WASHINGTON - The United Nations imposed new sanctions on Iran yesterday, capping a year of difficult diplomacy that may represent the Bush administration's final bid to mobilize international action against Tehran over its controversial nuclear program.
Just five months after President Bush warned that Iran's alleged pursuit of nuclear weapons could lead to "World War III," the White House had to settle for a watered-down UN resolution that makes most trade and financial sanctions voluntary. The Security Council voted 14-0 to sanction Iran for refusing to stop its uranium enrichment program, falling one short of the unanimous vote the White House sought to signal the international community's resolve.
US diplomacy was undercut by China's growing oil trade with Iran, Russia's ties to Tehran's nuclear energy program, and skepticism among four developing countries on the council about the need for yet another UN resolution. But Washington's own National Intelligence Estimate in December - which concluded with "high confidence" that Iran had shelved its nuclear weapons program in 2003 - did more than anything else to undermine the prospects for a hard-hitting resolution, according to current and former US officials.
In early December, the administration worried that its diplomatic initiative on Iran might die completely.
Although he had been briefed on the conclusions of the National Intelligence Estimate, Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns was sworn to secrecy before meeting his counterparts from Russia, China, France, Britain, and Germany in Paris on Dec. 1, to discuss strategy on Iran, US officials said. Ending months of debate, the world's six major powers agreed on the outline of a resolution, though differences remained on specifics.
Then on Dec. 3, the US intelligence community released the report undermining Washington's longstanding claim that Tehran was pursuing a nuclear weapons program.
"The NIE put a stake through the heart of diplomacy on Iran," said Bruce Riedel, a former senior CIA and national security official now at the Brookings Institution's Saban Center. "It pulled the rug out from under them in every way. The administration now can't go to war and can't even apply much pressure."
In a scramble to keep allies on board, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and national security adviser Stephen J. Hadley called their counterparts in Moscow, Beijing, Paris, London, and Berlin to explain why they should not abandon a new resolution, US officials said. The NIE, they argued, was about Iran's past efforts to develop a nuclear weapon, whereas the new resolution would focus on uranium enrichment, a separate and ongoing process that can be used for peaceful energy and to develop a weapon, and an effort Tehran acknowledged hiding for 18 years.
"There was a real concern at the beginning about whether we'd lose the consensus for a sanctions resolution and whether we would be able to hold the coalition together," acknowledged a senior administration official familiar with the diplomacy. "We didn't get into substance. We just wanted to find out: Will they stay with us or not?"
Burns, who had flown from Paris to Australia, was left to get the answers from allies. From Canberra, he got through quickly to the Europeans. "They were all surprised by the NIE," said the official, although in the end they agreed to pursue the UN route.
But it took two days for the Russians and Chinese to return Burns's calls. He was about to leave Australia when the Russians called to say they were willing to continue discussions. Just minutes before boarding a plane for the 18-hour flight home, Burns received a call from his Chinese counterpart, who said his country would not abandon the effort.
Then came the hard part of nailing down the details. Iran had already refused to cooperate with two earlier resolutions, passed in December 2006 and March 2007, and the administration had hoped that the long-sought third resolution would be so tough that it would finally persuade Tehran to give up enrichment and negotiate with the United States and Europeans on Iranian concerns.
But when the six major powers met again in Berlin on Jan. 22, Washington had to back down further to win consensus. Gone were measures against Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps and its elite Quds Force.
Washington had salvaged the diplomatic initiative, though at a cost. The toughest measures in yesterday's resolution include a travel ban on five officials linked to nuclear proliferation.
The new resolution expanded the list of banned dual-use items that can be subverted for weapons development. It also urged countries to inspect cargo on aircraft and ships traveling to and from Iran if they are suspected of transporting goods prohibited by the United Nations. But it offers no enforcement mechanisms for any of the measures.
Iran responded defiantly, charging that the Security Council has become "a mere tool of the national foreign policy of just a few countries."![]()



