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On Monday, the official IRNA news agency quoted Mehmanparast as saying Iran would continue to enrich uranium to the 20 percent level
-- a statement sure to trigger alarm among the U.S. and other nations pushing Iran to stop enrichment altogether. Besides the U.S., the other nations involved in standoff with Iran are Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China. Washington has been leading an effort to get the six nations to push through new U.N. sanctions. On Tuesday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu, whose nation has been reluctant in the past to impose harsher penalties, sounded positive about the new Iranian proposal. "We welcome the agreement. ... We hope this will help promote the peaceful settlement of the Iranian nuclear issue through negotiations," he said. Ma did not respond to a question on how the deal might affect negotiations over sanctions. China, which holds veto power on the Security Council, has repeatedly argued for more talks to resolve the situation but has expressed a willingness to discuss the possibility of new sanctions. Turkey's foreign minister on Tuesday urged the United States and its allies to stop discussions on more U.N. sanctions, saying that would "spoil the atmosphere." "Each side now should have a positive approach, constructive style and a real intention and objective of dialogue rather than focusing on mutual suspicion, skepticism, mutual threats, sanctions or other options," Ahmet Davutoglu told reporters in Istanbul.
[Associated
Press;
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