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  • Russia threatens payback if Iran sanctions affect its interests

    Russia threatens payback if Iran sanctions affect its interests

    MOSCOW, June 9 (RIA Novosti)

    The Russian Foreign Ministry warned on Wednesday of retaliatory
    measures if new sanctions against Iran affected Russian companies or
    individuals.

    The United Nations Security Council approved on Wednesday a new
    package of economic sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program.

    "We cannot possibly ignore signals reaching us about the intention of
    some of our partners...to start considering additional, tougher
    restrictive measures against Iran than those provided for under the UN
    Security Council resolution," the ministry said in a statement.

    The ministry said it was especially concerned by the prospect of
    "extraterritorial sanctions" - sanctions imposed on companies and
    individuals from third countries.

    "Such decisions, if they affect Russian legal entities or individuals,
    are fraught with retaliatory measures," it said.

    It said such moves were at odds with the principles of cooperation
    adopted at the Iran Six and the UN Security Council. The six countries
    involved in international negotiations with Tehran on its nuclear
    program, the United States, Britain, France, Germany, China and
    Russia, all voted for the resolution.

    The new sanctions are likely to prohibit the delivery of Russian
    S-300s surface-to-air missile systems to the Islamic Republic.

    However, a senior Russian lawmaker said in late May new sanctions
    against Iran would not stop Russia from fulfilling its S-300 contract.

    Moscow signed a contract on supplying Iran with at least five S-300
    systems in December 2005, but its implementation has so far been
    delayed.

    The United States and Israel have called on Russia not to deliver the
    missiles to Iran. The West is also concerned by Russia's role in
    helping Iran to build its first nuclear power plant in Bushehr.

    The Foreign Ministry statement said the resolution left wide scope for
    economic cooperation with Iran, and said that Russia was particularly
    interested in the construction of light water nuclear reactors in the
    Islamic Republic.

    The fourth round of sanctions will include tougher financial controls
    and an expanded arms embargo. They also impose an asset ban and a
    travel freeze on more than three dozen companies and individuals.

    Twelve members of the council's 15 members voted for the resolution,
    which was sponsored by the five permanent members of the Security
    Council - the United States, Britain, France, China and Russia. Turkey
    and Brazil voted against the resolution, and Lebanon abstained.

    U.S. Ambassador to the UN Susan Rice praised the vote as a decisive
    move against Iran's nuclear program, which she called a "grave threat
    to international security."

    "Until the world's concerns with Iran's nuclear defiance are fully
    resolved, we must work together to ensure that the sanctions in this
    resolution are fully and firmly implemented," she said.

    Just before the vote, Brazilian and Turkish envoys explained why they
    opposed the measure. Brazil's ambassador said they would send the
    wrong signal.

    Turkey and Brazil have brokered a deal in which Iran is to swap its
    uranium in Turkey for fuel to use in a Tehran research reactor.

    Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said earlier this week that
    Tehran would pull out of international talks on its nuclear program if
    the sanctions were approved. Speaking in Tajikistan after the
    sanctions were adopted, he dismissed the resolution as a "used tissue
    that should be thrown into the waste bin."




    From: A. Papazian
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