The report suggests that Iran will accept the idea of sending the material abroad – something it had previously appeared reluctant to do – but that there could be a tussle with the US and Europe over details of the plan.
France's foreign minister was already expressing exasperation with Tehran, saying it is trying to have the proposal "thoroughly reworked." Bernard Kouchner said he doesn't think the plan needs dramatic changes and warned Iran, "It cannot take forever. We wait for answers."
The plan calls for Iran to ship 70% of its enriched uranium abroad for further enrichment. The US and its allies back the deal because it would at least temporarily leave Iran's uranium stockpiles too low to build a nuclear weapon. Iran denies any intention to develop a bomb.
The report Tuesday on the state-run Arabic-language channel al-Alam cited an unidentified official saying Iran will officially reply on the deal within 48 hours. The official said Iran "will agree to the general framework" of the plan "with a request for important changes."
It did not specify the amendments Iran will seek. Another Iranian state channel, Press TV, said Tuesday that Tehran is opposed to sending the entire shipment abroad at once, suggesting it wants to do it in stages.
Iran has also given hints that it may want to send less than the 70% of its stockpiles abroad. On Monday, Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said Iran might agree to "deliver part of (the low enriched uranium) fuel which we currently don't need."
Speaking in Luxembourg, France's Kouchner showed impatience with Iran, suggesting it was drawing out its reply on the deal. "We have been waiting for almost three year for the light at the end of the tunnel. And we still wait," he said.
Source: Ynet