Lula Is All Smiles with Secretary Clinton, But Doesn’t Budge an Inch on Iran

Clinton, Lula and Dilma RousseffThe Brazilian government and Washington could not agree Wednesday over how to rein in Tehran’s suspect nuclear ambitions and Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva warned the world not to “push Iran into a corner.”

In talks with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Lula and his foreign minister Celso Amorim backed continued international negotiations to ensure Iran does not enrich uranium to the point it can build a nuclear bomb.

Lula set the tough tone for the talks with Clinton when he said it is “not prudent to push Iran into a corner. It is prudent to make it so that Iran continues to negotiate.”

In a combative press conference with Brazilian Foreign Affairs minister Celso Amorim, a stern-faced Clinton retorted that the US-led drive to impose a fourth set of UN sanctions on the Islamic Republic was the only way to bring it back to the negotiating table.

“Only after we pass sanctions in the Security Council will Iran negotiate in good faith,” Clinton said in a foreign ministry briefing room. Clinton echoed Amorim when she said both shared the goal of preventing Iran from becoming a nuclear weapons country, but said the two differed in how to attain it.

“Once the international community speaks in unison around a resolution, then the Iranians will come and begin to negotiate,” she said, raising her voice.

“So we want to get to the negotiation. We just think the best path is through the United Nations Security Council”. She also appeared to suggest Brazil and other countries were falling for what the US considers is antics by Iran.

“We see an Iran that runs to Brazil, an Iran that runs to Turkey, and an Iran that runs to China telling different things to different people to avoid sanctions,” she said.

Brazil is a current voting member on the 15-strong UN Security Council, though it is not one of the five permanent veto-wielding members.

When asked why Brazil was going against the growing consensus, Amorim responded sharply, “It’s not a matter of Brazil refusing to join a nuclear consensus”. Rather, he said it was a question of determining whether coercive measures like sanctions would work to achieve a consensus.

“Our view is that sanctions, in general, are counterproductive,” he said, adding that Brazil believed diplomacy was “worth the effort.”

“The director of the International Atomic Energy Agency will come to Brazil and I am going to suggest to him that he convene a meeting with the Iranian negotiators, perhaps with the presence of some new interlocutor,” he said.

“Once the international community expresses itself, sends a clear message, by means of a UN resolution, the Iranians will negotiate. And that is why the best path is through the UN Security Council,” he said.

Clinton’s visit to Brazil was preceded Friday by William Burns, the US undersecretary of state for political affairs, who leads US consultations on Iran among the permanent five members of the UN Security Council plus Germany.

Brasília was Clinton’s fourth stop on a six-nation Latin America tour, following visits to Chile, Argentina and Uruguay. She left for Costa Rica and Guatemala.
 
Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Believes China is Cheating to Inundate the Country with their Cheap Goods

Earlier this year, in March, Brazil slapped a surtax of US$ 13.85 on each ...

Emperor Dom Pedro’s Nightmare: Brazil Has Frozen in Time

Were he to be resuscitated today, Brazil’s last emperor, Dom Pedro II, would feel ...

Brazil’s Industry Lauds Tax Exemption for Foreign Investor

The president of the National Industrial Confederation (CNI), Armando Monteiro Neto, declared that he ...

No-Earthquake-Land Brazil Has Been Shaking Good Lately

Brazilians learn in elementary school that the country has been blessed with the absence ...

Brazil Free to Plant All Tobacco It Wants Despite Signing Tobacco Control Pact

Last year Brazil signed the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control and the government has ...

Some Lessons from Brazil to Fight World Poverty

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva announced that, during his visit to New ...

Brazil: Rio Landfill’s Biogas Will Power Petrobras’ Plant

The garbage decomposition’s gas at the Jardim Gramacho landfill, in Duque de Caxias, the ...

Brazil’s Plans to Keep Young Farmers in the Country

Brazil has 6 million young people, 18-24 years old, working in the countryside. 1.8 ...

Before Ending US Tour in NY, Brazil’s Sepultura Will Crisscross Country

Brazilian/American metal band Sepultura will be in New York for one show on Monday, ...