TEHRAN: Iran feels it has done enough to avert an imminent US attack and is confident its cushion of petrodollars will help it weather the impact of a third round of mild sanctions, Iranian analysts and politicians say.
Iranian leaders have vowed to press on with Tehran's disputed nuclear work regardless of new UN sanctions, after world powers this week agreed the outline of a new resolution.
The steps were far weaker than US officials had previously pushed for after Russian and Chinese reservations became more pronounced following a US intelligence report which said Tehran has halted a nuclear weapons programme in 2003.
Both analysts and politicians said the Islamic Republic, which has faced US sanctions for years, had learned to live with such penalties and now had a windfall of oil revenue to cope with any extra losses created by the measures.
“The prospect of an attack is off the menu for the time being. Both sides are buying time,” said analyst Saeed Laylaz.
“The Islamic Republic needs time to solve the technical problem (with centrifuges used to enrich uranium) and the United States needs more time to solve the Iraq problem, oil and (is busy) with elections,” he said.
A meeting of six world powers in Berlin on Tuesday agreed to a third set of sanctions against Iran for its failure to halt atomic work that Iran says it is mastering to produce power plant fuel but which the West says is aimed at building bombs.
Washington has spearheaded a drive for new sanctions and had been pushing for a new resolution to impose a ban on business with leading Iranian state banks. But diplomats said it backed away in the face of Russian and Chinese opposition.
Iran has consistently said sanctions would not prevent it from pursuing its nuclear work, even though economists say the penalties have been pushing up costs for Iranian traders and deterring foreign investors.
Iranian analysts and politicians said new penalties, particularly the weak measures agreed, would not help resolve the dispute.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad could even blame the sanctions for his economic woes such as rising inflation.
“It is a useless policy. Sanctions are a long-term weapon ... The nature of the dispute between Iran and the West is not long term,” said Laylaz. “They can hide their mismanagement behind these sanctions.”
—Reuters
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