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Diplomats said one option being discussed is appointment of an official "special coordinator" to study and consult with governments about ways forward. Arab states have been showing greater interest in nuclear power technology, worrying some observers that Iran's ambitious nuclear program, which the West alleges is aimed at weapons-making, will prompt neighboring nations to launch their own weapons programs. One Arab spokesman hinted at this potential for weapons proliferation to more Mideast states. If the nuke-free zone idea falters, governments are studying "alternatives that would be available to the Arab states," Lebanese diplomat Nawaf Salam, speaking for the Arab Group, told the conference Wednesday. Rapid movement toward a treaty establishing a weapons-free zone is highly unlikely. Israel, which doesn't officially confirm the existence of the Mideast's only nuclear arsenal, of perhaps 80 warheads, has long maintained that a comprehensive Arab-Israeli peace must first be reached before it would consider such a region-wide regime. Under the 40-year-old NPT, nations without nuclear weapons pledged not to acquire them, while the five powers pledged to eventually eliminate theirs. Israel is one of four nations that rejected the treaty -- with nuclear-armed India and Pakistan, and North Korea, which has a weapons-building program.
[Associated
Press;
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