Reuters UK - Jul 24, 2008
VIENNA, July 24 (Reuters) - The head of Iran's atomic energy organisation said on Thursday he was hopeful negotiations could start based on proposals made by Iran and the six powers at recent talks in Geneva.
"Both sides have received the messages of the other side and are carefully studying the concerns and expectations of both sides," Gholamreza Aghazadeh, who is also Iran's vice president, said.
giving Iran two weeks to answer calls to rein in its nuclear programme or face tougher sanctions.
International Herald Tribune - Jul 24, 2008
AP VIENNA, Austria: Iran on Thursday shrugged off a demand from six world powers to show flexibility on suspending uranium enrichment or face further UN
Earthtimes - Jul 24, 2008
Vienna - The heads of the Iranian Atomic Organization and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) started their meeting in Vienna on Thursday, to discuss Iran's cooperation with the IAEA and it's recent talks with world powers in Geneva. Gholam...
Posted : Thu, 24 Jul 2008 09:00:03 GMT
ElBaradei to discuss bilateral cooperation and how to proceed following the Geneva talks last Saturday.
Trend News Agency - Jul 24, 2008
Azerbaijan, Baku, 24 July /Trend News corr. T.Jafarov/ Iran’s Vice President and the Head of its Atomic Energy Organization Gholamreza Agazade will meet today with the Secretary General of International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Mohammad al-Baradei at the Vienna-based UN European Office, Iran’s IRNA news agency reported.
The meeting will be followed by a joint press conference.
orth-Western Azerbaijan
Monsters and Critics.com - Jul 23, 2008
Tehran - The heads of the Iranian Atomic Organization and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) will meet in Vienna to discuss the outcome of the nuclear talks last week between Iran and the world powers in Geneva, ISNA news agency reported Wednesday.
Gholam-Reza Aqazadeh and Mohamed ElBaradei will meet on Thursday and discuss bilateral cooperation and how to proceed following the Geneva talks, Iran's Atomic Energy Organization deputy Mohammad Saeidi told ISNA.
two weeks' time to give a clear reply to the main world powers' demand that Iran suspend uranium enrichment.
Reuters - Jul 23, 2008
By Bernd Debusmann That was the assessment of the US Central Intelligence Agency in August 1978, at a time when Iran's ruler was America's closest ally in
Family Security Matters - Jul 23, 2008
New intelligence continues to blast away like a sledgehammer at Iran’s rocklike insistence that its nuclear program is purely peaceful and not a nuclear weapons effort as many strongly believe.
The latest evidence comes out of the United Nation’s nuclear watchdog in Vienna, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which released a nine-page report that casts serious doubt on Iran’s purported pacifist power program.
re of these alleged studies and which Iran should share with the agency.”
guardian.co.uk - Jul 22, 2008
US-Iranian relations are once again headline news after dropping off the radar for several months in the wake of the US National Intelligence Estimate in December 2007. In recent days, media and public attention has focused on the growing US diplomatic overtures to Tehran, as well as the reports about a possible military attack on Iran that continue to circulate.
With all of the focus on the diplomatic and military fronts, there has been little attention paid lately to the middle ground between the two: the US financial campaign against Iran. Financial pressure may be the most important tool the US has in its arsenal to persuade Iran to abandon all of its nuclear ambitions.