ラベル meets の投稿を表示しています。 すべての投稿を表示
ラベル meets の投稿を表示しています。 すべての投稿を表示

2011年9月13日火曜日

UN nuke agency meets on Iran, Syria, NKorea, Japan - The Associated Press

UN nuke agency meets on Iran, Syria, NKorea, JapanBy GEORGE JAHN, Associated Press – 5 hours ago 

VIENNA (AP) — The head of the U.N. nuclear agency on Monday announced plans to publish new information backing up his belief that Iran may be working on a nuclear warhead — developments that leave his organization "increasingly concerned."

The comments by International Atomic Energy Agency chief Yukiya Amano were significant because it was the first time he revealed plans to release some of the most recent knowledge available to the IAEA leading to such worries. Such new intelligence would likely be detailed in the next report on Iran's nuclear activities in November.

Speaking at the start of a five-day meeting of the IAEA's 35-nation board, Amano also reiterated that — despite Syrian denials — a target hit in 2007 by Israeli warplanes was a nearly completed nuclear reactor meant to produce plutonium, which can be used to arm nuclear warheads.

At the same time, he announced that his staff would meet with Syrian officials next month to work out an "action plan" allowing Damascus to make good on promises to present new information on the site in its attempts to prove that the structure was a non-nuclear military facility.

He also had some positive words for Iran, saying it had demonstrated "greater transparency" than usual, in allowing a senior IAEA official to tour previously restricted nuclear sites last month.

At the same time, Amano urged the Islamic Republic to show more openness on other nuclear issues of concern. The agency, he said, "continues to receive new information" about Iranian attempts to develop a nuclear warhead, adding that he hoped "to set out in greater details the basis for the agency's concerns" in the near future.

Amano had already said he was "increasingly concerned" about possible warhead experiments by Iran in a report made available to The Associated Press earlier this month, when it was also shared with board members and the U.N. Security Council.

The phrase "increasingly concerned" — was also used by Amano in his remarks to the board Monday. It has not appeared in previous reports discussing Iran's alleged nuclear weapons work and reflects the frustration felt by him over the lack of progress in his investigations.

In its report, the International Atomic Energy Agency said "many member states" are providing evidence for that assessment, describing the information it is receiving as credible, "extensive and comprehensive."

The report also said Tehran had started installing equipment to enrich uranium at a new location — an underground bunker that is better protected from air attack than its present enrichment facilities.

Enrichment can produce both nuclear fuel and fissile warhead material, and Tehran — which says it wants only to produce fuel with the technology — is under four sets of U.N. Security Council sanctions for refusing to freeze enrichment.

It also denies secretly experimenting with a nuclear weapons program and has blocked a four-year attempt by the IAEA to follow up on intelligence that it secretly designed blueprints linked to a nuclear payload on a missile, experimented with exploding a nuclear charge, and conducted work on other components of a weapons program.

In a 2007 estimate, the U.S. intelligence community said that while Iran had worked on a weapons program such activities appeared to have ceased in 2003. But diplomats say a later intelligence summary avoided such specifics, and recent IAEA reports on the topic have expressed growing unease that such activities may be continuing.

Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


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UN nuke agency meets on Iran, Syria, NKorea, Japan (AP)

VIENNA – The head of the U.N. nuclear agency on Monday announced plans to publish new information backing up his belief that Iran may be working on a nuclear warhead — developments that leave his organization "increasingly concerned."

The comments by International Atomic Energy Agency chief Yukiya Amano were significant because it was the first time he revealed plans to release some of the most recent knowledge available to the IAEA leading to such worries. Such new intelligence would likely be detailed in the next report on Iran's nuclear activities in November.

Speaking at the start of a five-day meeting of the IAEA's 35-nation board, Amano also reiterated that — despite Syrian denials — a target hit in 2007 by Israeli warplanes was a nearly completed nuclear reactor meant to produce plutonium, which can be used to arm nuclear warheads.

At the same time, he announced that his staff would meet with Syrian officials next month to work out an "action plan" allowing Damascus to make good on promises to present new information on the site in its attempts to prove that the structure was a non-nuclear military facility.

He also had some positive words for Iran, saying it had demonstrated "greater transparency" than usual, in allowing a senior IAEA official to tour previously restricted nuclear sites last month.

At the same time, Amano urged the Islamic Republic to show more openness on other nuclear issues of concern. The agency, he said, "continues to receive new information" about Iranian attempts to develop a nuclear warhead, adding that he hoped "to set out in greater details the basis for the agency's concerns" in the near future.

Amano had already said he was "increasingly concerned" about possible warhead experiments by Iran in a report made available to The Associated Press earlier this month, when it was also shared with board members and the U.N. Security Council.

The phrase "increasingly concerned" — was also used by Amano in his remarks to the board Monday. It has not appeared in previous reports discussing Iran's alleged nuclear weapons work and reflects the frustration felt by him over the lack of progress in his investigations.

In its report, the International Atomic Energy Agency said "many member states" are providing evidence for that assessment, describing the information it is receiving as credible, "extensive and comprehensive."

The report also said Tehran had started installing equipment to enrich uranium at a new location — an underground bunker that is better protected from air attack than its present enrichment facilities.

Enrichment can produce both nuclear fuel and fissile warhead material, and Tehran — which says it wants only to produce fuel with the technology — is under four sets of U.N. Security Council sanctions for refusing to freeze enrichment.

It also denies secretly experimenting with a nuclear weapons program and has blocked a four-year attempt by the IAEA to follow up on intelligence that it secretly designed blueprints linked to a nuclear payload on a missile, experimented with exploding a nuclear charge, and conducted work on other components of a weapons program.

In a 2007 estimate, the U.S. intelligence community said that while Iran had worked on a weapons program such activities appeared to have ceased in 2003. But diplomats say a later intelligence summary avoided such specifics, and recent IAEA reports on the topic have expressed growing unease that such activities may be continuing.


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2011年8月25日木曜日

Biden Meets With Tsunami Survivors in Japan - New York Times

NATORI, Japan — Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. met with survivors of the Japanese tsunami and spoke at an airport that was reopened just a month after the disaster with American military help, in a visit aimed at highlighting strengthened ties with Japan.

Mr. Biden was on the final leg of an eight-day trip to Asia that was dedicated mostly to improving relations with China, whose rising economic and political power is a challenge to the United States and has overshadowed a Japan mired in two decades of stagnation and then hit in March by an earthquake, a tsunami and a nuclear disaster. Mr. Biden used the first of his two days here as a counterbalance, offering reassurances that the United States remains committed to its disaster-stricken ally.

He stressed the two nations’ economic and military ties, at times sounding almost as if he were giving a pep talk. He said it was in the United States’ interest for Japan to recover and help lift the sagging global economy. “Some around the world are betting on the decline of America and the inability of Japan to recover,” Mr. Biden said at a speech at the Sendai Airport. “They are making a very bad bet.”

The airport serves as a showcase of the goodwill created here by the American military’s large relief efforts after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami struck northeastern Japan, leaving some 20,000 people dead or missing. The United States Army, Air Force and other services worked with Japanese military personnel to reopen the airport, after it was struck by a 10-foot wave that covered the runway with mud and mangled cars and stranded more than 1,000 people in the terminal.

In his speech at the immaculate, modern terminal building, Mr. Biden noted that just a few months ago, the lower floors had been gutted by the tsunami and its upper floors filled with shivering and frightened refugees, many from neighborhoods that had been swept away.

“I’m proud that our military was given the privilege to join your forces” in repairing the airport, Mr. Biden said in the speech, as several Self-Defense Force generals looked on. Above them, a banner proclaimed, “Stay Strong Japan!”

Earlier in the day, Mr. Biden met in Tokyo with the Japanese prime minister, Naoto Kan, who thanked him for American assistance. Mr. Biden praised the dignity and perseverance of the Japanese people in the face of the disaster.

Mr. Kan, 66, is deeply unpopular here, and a cabinet minister said Tuesday that his expected resignation is likely to come next week, adding to the country’s uncertainties. The fifth prime minister in as many years, he was first criticized as being haplessness in foreign and economic policy, then for blunders in response to the disaster at the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant.

The American relief efforts, known as Operation Tomodachi, or Friend, provided a chance to strengthen ties with Japan that had frayed last year during a dispute over an American air base on Okinawa. On Tuesday, Mr. Biden repeatedly spoke of the friendship between the nations, saying that he had no doubt Japan would have come to America’s aid if the tables had been turned.

Mr. Biden spent several hours in Natori, a town made famous by video, broadcast worldwide, of the tsunami tearing through homes and farm fields. He joined the town’s mayor in laying a bouquet of white flowers at a pile of what had once been decorative garden stones in front of a shattered home near Natori’s ravaged waterfront.

He also visited a community center that had served as a refugee center after the disaster and nearby temporary housing for some 400 people whose homes near the airport were destroyed. He nodded gravely as he listened to survivors who described their ordeal.

“The American military made the airport very clean,” said one survivor, Kyuichiro Sakurai, 70, whose home was washed away. “We won’t forget that.”

Mr. Biden seemed relaxed, making jokes about his thinning hair and holding a young boy for several minutes in one arm as he shook hands with survivors. The Japanese applauded him and seemed genuinely touched.

“I want you to know that America will stay involved here as long as you want us to,” he said, prompting several older Japanese women to break into tears. Mr. Biden hugged one of them.

“I feel gratitude that he would come all the way here to support us,” said one of the women, Katsuko Suzuki, 79.

At several points during the visit, Mr. Biden said Americans had been moved by the survivors’ stoicism and quiet courage.

“The American people admire the spirit of the Japanese people,” he said. “Disaster met its match in the legendary industriousness and perseverance of the Japanese people.”


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2011年8月24日水曜日

Biden meets with Japanese tsunami survivors - USA Today

Vice President Biden spent Tuesday in Sendai, Japan, where he told survivors of the March earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster that Americans "admire their character" for having persevered against adversity.

Biden, on a nine-day Asia trip that has taken him to China and Mongolia, toured largely vacant areas where entire neighborhoods once stood and met with survivors living in temporary housing nearby.

The vice president talked about how much Americans admire the "stamina and resolve" of the survivors. "We're here as long as you need us to help you rebuild," he said, according to press pooler Michael Memoli of the Los Angeles Times. "The way you came together was the envy of the world."

Traveling from Tokyo, Biden delivered a speech in Sendai to an audience composed of U.S. and Japanese military, Japanese teachers and students, first responders and displaced families.

"I came to express not only my commitment to say we will do whatever we can to help, [but also] to tell you how much the president, how much I, how much the American people admire your character," he said.

Biden met in Tokyo with Prime Minister Naoto Kan, telling him that no one should bet against Japan's ability to recover from disaster or America's ability to recover from recession.

"There are voices in the world who are counting us out," he said. "They are making a very bad bet."


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