(CNN)
-- Iranian lawmakers want Tehran to reassess its cooperation with the U.N.
atomic agency after the latter published what Iran calls a "politically
motivated" report on its nuclear program, state-run Press TV reported
Ali
Larijani, speaker of the parliament, said Sunday the report by the
International Atomic Energy Agency was based on outdated information from the
United States and Israel.
"I
think we should seriously reconsider our cooperation," according
parliament member Siamak Mareh Sedq, who said the negatives of IAEA membership
outweigh positives.
"Anyone
in his right mind will think twice before becoming a member of such an
organization," lawmaker Mehdi Kouchakzadeh said.
Mohammad-Hassan
Aboutorabi-Fard, vice speaker of the parliament, suggested a different
approach.
"I
think we must work with the IAEA. This way we can continue to prove that the
agency has no independence," Aboutorabi-Fard said. "The opposite is
also true; as a member we can help the agency revise its policies and become
politically independent and effective as an international body."
According
to the report released last week, Iran is believed to have continued weapons
research and technology development after 2003, when the intelligence community
thought it had stopped. Instead of halting, it seems Iran took a hiatus,
although the program has progressed at a more modest pace since then, the
report said.
Iran
has always said its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes.
Iran
has very likely undertaken engineering studies on arming long-range missiles
with a nuclear payload, according to the IAEA report, a possibility that has
left Israel ill at ease.
The
Jewish state has warned it will consider all options to confront its arch
nemesis.
But
Israeli President Shimon Peres would not want to see military force used
"immediately," he told CNN's Piers Morgan in an interview Monday.
"I
would rather prefer to see a tighter economic sanction, a closer political
pressure, and what is lacking very much is a(n) attack in moral sense, because
Iran is a spoiled country," the Israeli leader said. "It's morally
corrupt."
Peres
accused Iran of supporting terrorism internationally and of being the only
country "that threatens to destroy another country openly."
President
Barack Obama said Sunday that the United States continues to work with the
international community, especially Russia and China, to isolate Iran and
strengthen sanctions against them.
"I
have said repeatedly and I will say it today, we are not taking any options off
the table, because it's my firm belief that an Iran with a nuclear weapon would
pose a security threat not only to the region but also to the United
States," Obama said during a news conference after the Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation summit in Hawaii.
"But
our strong preference is to have Iran meet its international obligations,
negotiate diplomatically, to allow them to have peaceful use of nuclear energy
in accordance with international law, but at the same time, forswear the
weaponization of nuclear power."
The
United States will continue to consult with Russia and China in the coming
weeks on possible options available, Obama said. The three nations agree that
they don't want a nuclear arms race triggered in the region, according to the president.
Russian
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Monday that Russia will not support new
sanctions.
"I
think that the campaign (around the IAEA report) might have been orchestrated
to stir up passions and to prepare the ground for new unilateral sanctions. We
think that the potential of sanctions against Iran has been spent," he
said, according to the Interfax news agency.
"It's
clear that Iran is trying to achieve a nuclear weapon and Iran needs to be
stopped," Tzipi Livni, an Israeli opposition leader and former foreign
minister, said last week. "Iran needs to understand ... that all options
are on the table."
But
Germany on Monday said it will not take part in discussions about military
action.
"We
think such discussions are counterproductive and even dangerous," said
Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle.
By the CNN Wire Staff
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