The conference, organized by the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies, welcomed delegates from Arabian Gulf nations, major powers, the United States, China and Russia, and other countries, such as France, Britain and Australia. Those here for the three-day event included foreign affairs and national security officials, and also analysts and private sector representatives from the countries.
The organizers were "notified at 10 a.m. (0700 GMT) that Minister Mottaki would not attend the Manama Dialogue and Iran would not send a delegation," said Kay Floyd, the conference's press officer. There was no immediate report in Iran on the changed stance, but earlier yesterday, Iranian state radio had said that an Iranian representative would attend the Manama meeting - an indication Tehran had likely made the decision at the last moment. A diplomat at the Iranian Embassy in Bahrain, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the press, confirmed Tehran would not be sending anyone to the event.
US Defense Secretary Robert Gates is scheduled to address the conference today in a speech titled "The US and the Regional Balance of Power." Gates' speech comes as Washington is trying to keep up international pressure on Iran despite a recent US intelligence report saying Tehran suspended its nuclear weapons program in 2003 and has shown no sign of resuming it. The report was a dramatic turnaround from one issued in 2005 that concluded Iran had restarted its nuclear weapons program, but US President George W Bush has continued to push for a third round of UN sanctions against Tehran, saying international pressure is key to keeping the program dormant.
The report also contained warnings about Iran's continued nuclear activity and said the country could produce enough enriched uranium to have a nuclear bomb by 2010-2015. Shortly after the release of the report, Mottaki said the US would face more failure in its standoff with Iran over the nuclear issue if the US didn't alter its stance. Mottaki's spokesman, Mohammad Ali Hosseini, has said the report proved Washington's warnings over the danger of the Iranian nuclear program "are baseless and unreliable.
The US and many of its allies accuse Iran of using its nuclear program as cover for weapons development, a claim Tehran denies.
Washington has pushed through two rounds of UN sanctions against Iran and demands the country suspend its uranium enrichment program, which can produce fuel for a nuclear reactor or fissile material for a bomb. Iran has continually refused, saying it has a right to pursue enrichment under the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. - AP
5 comments:
I don't' blame Iran I wouldn't go either. Any time an official from the Bush Administration speaks it's a lie. Iran should wait until the US has a real President that doesn't have memory lost or lie. No one is going to believe Gates either. While Gates was in Russia they treated him like he wasn't even there after making him and Connie wait for over an hour.
"While Gates was in Russia they treated him like he wasn't even there after making him and Connie wait for over an hour."
Ha Ha Ha!!!!!!! The cat lived in Russia for a while. That is a DIRECT INSULT.
And Gates was in Russia talking about Iran being a threat.......no wonder, everyone is tired of the same old rhetoric.
Iran did very well at the GCC Summit, so why bother with this one, they just need to attend ones that will make a difference and be able to accomplish something at.
The Russians are INSIDE Iran helping them with their nuclear program. Of all the countries on the planet, the Russians know more than anyone else about the nuclear program Iran is buying from them.
The Russians know more about what is in Iran's nuclear program than the U.S. knew about what ingredients are in the kids' toys and pet food that we are buying from the Chinese.
P.S. Gates is lucky the Russians only made him wait an hour . . .
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