Iran clenches its fist
Western powers were likely to rebuff Tehran's proposed amendments because their priority is to reduce the stockpile of Iranian LEU to ward off the danger that Iran might turn it into the highly-enriched uranium needed for an atom bomb.
Sending most of the LEU abroad would buy about a year for talks on halting enrichment in Iran in return for incentives to forge a long-term solution to the nuclear dispute.
The powers will see Iran's counter-offer involving nuclear fuel imports as problematic because U.N. sanctions ban trade in nuclear materials, including enriched uranium, with Tehran.
Iran views such sanctions as illegal and unjust.
Defence Minister Ehud Barak said the downside of the agreement was that it granted international recognition to uranium enrichment by Iran.
He urged the international community to go further and demand a complete stop to enrichment on Iranian soil.
'If this agreement is implemented, it will take them back a year, but there is a fly in the ointment. It means that they (the US, Russia and France) recognize that Iran is enriching uranium and that helps them (Iran) with their argument that they are enriching uranium for peaceful purposes,' Barak said.
'It is important to insist on an end to enrichment in Iran,' he told Israel Radio.
Israel Matzav: Iran clenches its fist
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