Source confirms that Baghdad will hold a meeting tonight "decisive" between Ashton and Jalili on the Iranian nuclear
Ali Abdullah - 23/05/2012 AD - 10:32 PM
Iraqi source said earlier, on Wednesday evening, that a meeting will be held, this night, between the presidents of the delegations of the European Union and the Iranian side to discuss the paper presented by Tehran over its nuclear program, expected to be a meeting between the parties "critical."
The source said in a press statement, "The meeting will be held tonight in Baghdad, between the responsible foreign policy in the European Union, Catherine Ashton, hold a meeting with the Secretary of the Supreme Council for National Security Iran's Saeed Jalili, to discuss the paper on the Iranian nuclear file."
The source, who requested anonymity, that "the meeting will be crucial," he continued, saying that "the parties, either to agree on certain decisions or to complete the negotiations between them."
And hosts of Baghdad on Wednesday (23 May 2012), a meeting of the Group of 5 +1 on Iran's nuclear program headed by responsible foreign policy in the European Union, Catherine Ashton, and the presence of the Secretary-General of the Supreme Council for National Security Iran's Saeed Jalili, following approval by the permanent members of Security Council and Germany, while the Iraqi government confirmed its readiness to protect him and not allow any state to participate in the meeting that interfere with security.
The international community accuses Tehran of using its civilian nuclear program declared to conceal a plan to develop atomic weapons pose a serious threat to the security of the region, while still the United Nations imposed sanctions on Tehran over this file, and not to allow international inspectors to visit centers of reactors to determine their nature, while Iran has denied repeatedly seeking to acquire nuclear weapons, saying its nuclear program that the goal of a civil exchange, and approved the production of over 4,500 kilograms of enriched uranium since 2007, an amount sufficient to produce four nuclear weapons, according to estimates of the number of experts.
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