European Foreign Ministers have called for diplomacy rather than a
military option to prod Iran to abandon its nuclear activities, despite
lack of progress in talks with Iranian officials in Geneva. Lisa
Bryant has more from Paris.
European Union ministers remained
adamant Tuesday that talks were the only way to solve the impasse over
Iran's nuclear program. British Foreign Secretary David Miliband told
the Associated Press that it is now up to Iran to respond to world
powers following a meeting Saturday in Geneva between Iran on the one
side, and the United States, European, Chinese, Russian and other
diplomats on the other.
That meeting appeared to go nowhere,
with Iranian diplomats reportedly steadfast in the pursuit of their
nuclear program which they insist is for peaceful purposes. The
United States and a number of European nations, believe Iran might be
building a nuclear weapon.
At a press conference in Brussels
Tuesday, EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana said the door for
dialogue with Iran remained open.
He said he awaited a
response from the Iranian government with optimism. Then, he said, it
was important to start tackling what he described as a "second phase"
in negotiations.
EU ministers also agreed to toughen sanctions against Zimbabwe's president Robert Mugabe.
News
EU Foreign Ministers Call For More Diplomacy With Iran
update