U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is
urging the U.N. Security Council to impose sanctions on Iran immediately,
saying the Tehran government must be held accountable for its defiance
regarding the nation's nuclear program. Secretary Rice says Iran is
closely watching the world's reaction to North Korea's recent nuclear
test, and says weapons programs in both countries will never bring them
prestige or more security.
Secretary Rice says it is time for action on Iran's nuclear program.
"The United Nations Security Council is now working on an Iran
sanctions resolution. For the international community to be credible, it
must pass a resolution now that holds Iran accountable for its defiance,"
she said.
Secretary Rice made the remarks in a speech at the Heritage Foundation,
a Washington-based public policy institute.
She says Iran should pay close attention to the wide-ranging sanctions
being imposed on North Korea since it carried out its first test of a
nuclear weapon earlier this month.
"The greatest challenge to the non-proliferation regime comes from
countries that violate their responsibilities under the Non-Proliferation
Treaty," she added. "The North Korean government has been one such case,
so is Iran. The Iranian regime is watching how the world responds to North
Korea's behavior and it can now see the international community will
confront this threat. Iran can see that the path North Korea is choosing
is not leading to more prestige and more prosperity or more security. It
is leading to just the opposite."
Western nations fear Iran's uranium enrichment program could allow the
Islamic republic to make nuclear weapons. Teheran insists its program is
solely aimed at generating electricity.
Secretary Rice also urged North Korea to return to talks regarding
incentives being offered if Pyongyang abandons its efforts to build
nuclear weapons.
"North Korea should live up
to its own international agreements to de-nuclearize and
it should pursue policies that are not hostile to its neighbors and
hostile to international principles and norms of behavior," she said.
"Everything North Korea says that it seeks is on the table in the
six-party talks."
The six-party process, which includes the United States, North Korea,
China, South Korea, Japan and Russia, began in 2003, but has been stalled
for more than a year because of a boycott by Pyongyang.
Secretary Rice recently wrapped up a trip to the region where she
sought support for the U.N. sanctions against North Korea. |