The Dangerous Path Set by the UNSC Resolution 1737
By Brent Lollis
In December 2006, the Iranian nuclear crisis took a drastic turn toward a more spiral and dangerous development: after months of negotiations, offer of incentives, and threat of sanctions, the European trio (United Kingdom, France and Germany) and the United States succeeded in convincing China and Russia to go along with a so-called watered down UN Security Council resolution (1737) imposing sanctions on Iran. The reason: Iran's refusal to accept the UNSC's demand to halt its nuclear enrichment programs as a precondition for further negotiations for an eventual settlement of the crisis. Iran insisted that it is exercising its right under the NPT and will not compromise over that right. It did, however, offer to negotiate its programs if no preconditions were set.
