China: Now is not the time for new Iran sanctions

By News Agencies

China’s United Nations ambassador on Tuesday said that Beijing was not ready to immediately support new sanctions against Iran, as called for by Western powers, saying the issue needed “more time and patience.”

“This is not the right time or right moment for sanctions because the diplomatic efforts are still going on,” China’s UN Ambassador Zhang Yesui told reporters through an interpreter.

The U.S. and other Western allies accuse Iran of working to develop nuclear weapons. Iran denies the charge and says its program is for peaceful purposes.
Earlier on Tuesday, Iran welcomed U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton’s remarks that the West would not insist on a hard-and-fast deadline for starting dialogue over the Islamic Republic’s contentious nuclear program.

Clinton said Monday that the United States has begun discussing with its allies methods of “pressure and sanctions” to take on Iran. She emphasized that the goal was to keep the door to dialogue open, so as stop the Islamic regime without harming innocent civilians.

“We share the same idea with her. Deadlines are meaningless,” Iranian government spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said on response on Tuesday.
The U.S. and other Western allies accuse Iran of working to develop nuclear weapons. Iran denies the charge and says its program is for peaceful purposes.

“Our goal is to pressure the Iranian government, particularly the Revolutionary Guard elements without contributing to the suffering of ordinary [Iranians] who deserve better than what they are currently receiving,” Clinton said on Monday.

A State Department official said that the goal was to keep the “door to dialogue” open, but added that the U.S. “would not wait forever.”

“We have avoided using the term “deadline” ourselves, since we have made clear that the door to dialogue will remain open,” said the official. “But we have also made clear that we will not wait forever, and discussions on pressure and sanctions with our international partners have already begun.”

Reiterating Clinton’s remarks, the official said: It’s not appropriate to comment on the details of those discussions, except to say that our objective is to pressure the Iranian government without contributing to the suffering of ordinary Iranian citizens.”

According to the official, the U.S. was growing wary of Iran’s continued defiance of international demands, which he said had contributed to the recent discussion with its allies.

“The results of our efforts to engage the Iranians directly have not been encouraging. And we remain disappointed at Iran’s non-response to a proposal for the Tehran Research Reactor,” said the official.

“The Iranian government essentially announced a deadline to receive a positive response to their unacceptable counter-offer,” he added, referring to the West’s offer to export uranium enrichment off Iranian territory. “This sort of behavior only increases our concerns and those of others in the international community, about Iran’s intentions.”

Haaretz for more