OPENING COMMENTS OF JACK STRAW
U.K. FOREIGN
SECRETARY
AT THE EU FOREIGN MINISTERS INFORMAL MEETING
(GYMNICH 2005)
U.K. FOREIGN AND COMMONWEALTH OFFICE
September 1, 2005
Excerpts
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to Newport, Wales. I am very grateful
to the Almighty for ensuring that the weather has been good; however,
I am sorry that
it was in the hands of the Almighty that some unseen human hand has led
to the problems you have had in getting proper internet access. I can
only apologise
for that. I am very concerned about it, and I have been told that the technical
people are doing everything they can to resolve it.
. . .
THE SITUATION IN IRAN
We then discussed at some length Iran, followed by an agreement to come
back to the issue of our relationship with Russia. Member states regretted
that
Iran had chosen to regret without, we felt, serious consideration the European
side's detailed proposals, which we presented to them on 5 August. They
are the most far reaching proposals for relations between Iran and Europe
presented
since the Iranian revolution. In our judgment, they provide the basis for
a new relationship based on cooperation. All member states expressed
deep concern
at Iran's resumption of uranium conversion, which is in breach of successive
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) board resolutions, and the Paris
Agreement, which was entered into between Iran and the European Union E3
last November. The European Union very much hopes that Iran will reconsider
its
position. We look forward to the IAEA Director General Mohammad El Baradei's
report in respect of Iran in two days' time on 3 September.
The key to resolving this issue is for Iran to take the confidence
building steps requested of it in those successive board resolutions.
We agreed
that Iran's recent actions undermined the confidence which was being
built and
which was a challenge to the European Union; it is a situation that
we thought we
could not accept. Unless suspension was reinstated, there would have
to be a response - for example, a report of the IAEA's wider concerns about Iran's
nuclear programme - to the United Nations Security Council. We also agreed
that before making decisions, we would wait to see Dr El Baradei's report
and pursue consultations with other board members on the next steps.
A second concern expressed very strongly by European Union colleagues
today related to Iran's human rights record. This remains a major concern
of the
European Union and, together with the nuclear issue, terrorism and Iran's
attitude to the Middle East peace process, would remain a major factor
which shaped
our foreign policy. We will be monitoring these issues closely.
. . .
