US National Intelligence Estimate Indicates Iran Threat Overblown, Chinese Reaction

BEIJING (AFP)--China's Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi held a round of telephone diplomacy with E.U. and U.S. counterparts, his ministry said Tuesday, after a U.S. report stated Iran had halted its nuclear weapons drive.
Τρι, 4 Δεκεμβρίου 2007 - 04:24
BEIJING (AFP)--China's Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi held a round of telephone diplomacy with E.U. and U.S. counterparts, his ministry said Tuesday, after a U.S. report stated Iran had halted its nuclear weapons drive.

Yang held talks with European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana late Monday and U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice early Tuesday, the ministry said in a statement on its website.

"The Chinese side is willing to continue to make efforts to appropriately resolve the Iranian nuclear issue," the statement quoted Yang as telling Solana in the late-night telephone call.

In a report released Monday, the U.S. National Intelligence Estimate said Iran halted its nuclear weapons drive in 2003 and indicated that U.S. charges about Tehran's atomic goals have been overblown for at least two years.

During the discussions, Solana also briefed Yang on his recent talks with Iranian nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili, the statement said.

In a Tuesday morning call to Rice, Yang "exchanged views on the Iranian nuclear issue," it added, without going into details.

China has long maintained that sanctions on Iran aren't productive to resolving the row over whether Tehran is seeking to develop atomic weapons.

Beijing has also insisted that Iran should be allowed to develop peaceful uses of nuclear technology under the oversight of the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency.

The Chinese foreign ministry didn't immediately reply Tuesday morning to requests for a comment on the U.S. intelligence report