Latest News

Lavrov warns Russia against any new US attack on Iran

In an interview published on Wednesday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov?said any new U.S. attack on Iran would have serious consequences. He called for restraint in order to find a solution that will allow Iran to pursue a peaceful nuclear programme.

Lavrov's interview with Saudi Arabia's Al-Arabiya TV was broadcast a day after U.S. negotiators and Iranian negotiators met in Geneva for indirect talks to avert a new crisis between Washington, D.C. and Tehran.

"The consequences of this are bad." Already, there have been attacks on Iran's nuclear sites under the control the International Atomic Energy Agency. Lavrov stated in an interview posted on the website of his ministry that "we can judge there were real risks" of a nuclear accident.

"I carefully watch reactions in the area from Arab countries and Gulf monarchies. Nobody wants tensions to increase. "This is playing with fire."

He said that a rise in tensions could reverse 'the positive steps taken over the past few years, such as improved relations between Iran, and neighboring countries, including Saudi Arabia.

On Wednesday, a senior U.S. Official said that Iran would be expected to present a written proposal regarding how it will resolve its standoff against the United States following the Geneva talks.

The official stated that U.S. national security advisers met at the White House Wednesday, and were informed by the administration that all U.S. forces in the region must be "in place" by mid-March.

The United States has asked Iran to 'give up' its nuclear program, but Iran has refused and denied that it is developing an atomic bomb.

Lavrov said that Arab countries sent signals to Washington, "clearly calling on'restraint' and the search for an accord that won't infringe Iran’s legal rights and... guaranteeing that Iran has a purely pacifist nuclear enrichment program".

He said that Russia remained in regular, close contact with Iran's leadership "and we do not have any reason to doubt the sincerity of Iran to solve this problem by observing the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty". Reporting by Christian Schmollinger; Editing by Christian Schmollinger

(source: Reuters)