- Reaction score
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- Points
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Here is the article in question where Blair mentions the other phase.....reproduced under the normal caveats.
http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=42cd32b4-ce57-4398-822f-2434fa09b236
Blair warns Iran of 'different phase' in hostage crisis
Paul Hughes, Reuters
Published: Tuesday, March 27, 2007
LONDON — Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair warned Tehran today of a "different phase" if it did not free 15 British military personnel captured in the Gulf four days ago.
The sailors' capture and new U.N. sanctions imposed on Tehran on Saturday over its disputed nuclear program have stoked tensions between the West and Iran and pushed oil prices to a 2007 high.
Today, Russia and the United Arab Emirates urged Iran to comply with U.N. demands that it halt sensitive nuclear work but Tehran says the U.N. resolution is illegal.
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Font: ****Iran, which denies any intention of making atomic weapons, has said it may charge the two boatloads of British sailors and marines with illegally entering its waters in the northern Gulf. Britain insists they were operating in Iraqi waters.
"What we are trying to do ... is to pursue this through the diplomatic channels and make the Iranian government understand these people have to be released and that there is absolutely no justification whatever for holding them," Blair said.
"They have to release them. If not, then this will move into a different phase," he told Britain's GMTV television.
Blair's spokesman said the next step London could take would be to publish proof, in the form of global satellite positioning (GPS) records, that the sailors had not entered Iranian waters.
"We so far haven't made explicit why we know that because we don't want to escalate this," he said.
A government source in London told Reuters British officials were showing Iran data on the sailors' exact position when seized.
Britain has been assured that the sailors are well but has not been given access to them or told where they are being held.
LEAVE DOOR OPEN
British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett, visiting Iran's neighbor Turkey where her counterpart Abdullah Gul voiced support for the sailors' release, said Britain would "continue to leave the door open for a constructive outcome."
Iraq's government and an Iraqi fisherman who witnessed the capture say it took place in Iraqi waters.
Iran captured eight British servicemen in similar circumstances in 2004 and released them after three nights.
Analysts have said the current crisis appeared more complex and would take longer to resolve than three years ago.
"The incident in 2004 was less tense, there were fewer gathering clouds, so they may well be held for longer," said Alex Bigham, of the Foreign Policy Center. "There are probably also internal political battles in Iran over what to do next."
Some hardline groups in Iran suggest the case could be a bargaining chip in its nuclear and other rows with the West, exposing what analysts said were divisions with more moderate voices who want to build bridges abroad, not exacerbate tension.
In Iran, a crowd of hardline students chanting "Death to Britain" gathered today on the shoreline close to where the Britons were captured and demanded firm action against the sailors, Iran's semi official Mehr news agency reported.
But the official IRNA news agency suggested in a commentary the issue could still be resolved if London apologized.
In Moscow, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov urged Iran to return to negotiations over its nuclear program.
"The door is open ... I hope that a positive reaction (from Iran) will follow," he said.
UAE President Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed al-Nahayan said his country would not be involved in any military strike on Iran, but urged the Islamic Republic to avoid stoking tensions.
(Additional reporting by David Clarke, Katherine Baldwin and Sophie Walker in London, Fredrik Dahl in Tehran, Zerin Elci in Ankara, Diala Saadeh in Dubai, Dmitry Solovyov in Moscow)
Reuters
http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=42cd32b4-ce57-4398-822f-2434fa09b236
Blair warns Iran of 'different phase' in hostage crisis
Paul Hughes, Reuters
Published: Tuesday, March 27, 2007
LONDON — Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair warned Tehran today of a "different phase" if it did not free 15 British military personnel captured in the Gulf four days ago.
The sailors' capture and new U.N. sanctions imposed on Tehran on Saturday over its disputed nuclear program have stoked tensions between the West and Iran and pushed oil prices to a 2007 high.
Today, Russia and the United Arab Emirates urged Iran to comply with U.N. demands that it halt sensitive nuclear work but Tehran says the U.N. resolution is illegal.
Email to a friend
Printer friendly
Font: ****Iran, which denies any intention of making atomic weapons, has said it may charge the two boatloads of British sailors and marines with illegally entering its waters in the northern Gulf. Britain insists they were operating in Iraqi waters.
"What we are trying to do ... is to pursue this through the diplomatic channels and make the Iranian government understand these people have to be released and that there is absolutely no justification whatever for holding them," Blair said.
"They have to release them. If not, then this will move into a different phase," he told Britain's GMTV television.
Blair's spokesman said the next step London could take would be to publish proof, in the form of global satellite positioning (GPS) records, that the sailors had not entered Iranian waters.
"We so far haven't made explicit why we know that because we don't want to escalate this," he said.
A government source in London told Reuters British officials were showing Iran data on the sailors' exact position when seized.
Britain has been assured that the sailors are well but has not been given access to them or told where they are being held.
LEAVE DOOR OPEN
British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett, visiting Iran's neighbor Turkey where her counterpart Abdullah Gul voiced support for the sailors' release, said Britain would "continue to leave the door open for a constructive outcome."
Iraq's government and an Iraqi fisherman who witnessed the capture say it took place in Iraqi waters.
Iran captured eight British servicemen in similar circumstances in 2004 and released them after three nights.
Analysts have said the current crisis appeared more complex and would take longer to resolve than three years ago.
"The incident in 2004 was less tense, there were fewer gathering clouds, so they may well be held for longer," said Alex Bigham, of the Foreign Policy Center. "There are probably also internal political battles in Iran over what to do next."
Some hardline groups in Iran suggest the case could be a bargaining chip in its nuclear and other rows with the West, exposing what analysts said were divisions with more moderate voices who want to build bridges abroad, not exacerbate tension.
In Iran, a crowd of hardline students chanting "Death to Britain" gathered today on the shoreline close to where the Britons were captured and demanded firm action against the sailors, Iran's semi official Mehr news agency reported.
But the official IRNA news agency suggested in a commentary the issue could still be resolved if London apologized.
In Moscow, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov urged Iran to return to negotiations over its nuclear program.
"The door is open ... I hope that a positive reaction (from Iran) will follow," he said.
UAE President Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed al-Nahayan said his country would not be involved in any military strike on Iran, but urged the Islamic Republic to avoid stoking tensions.
(Additional reporting by David Clarke, Katherine Baldwin and Sophie Walker in London, Fredrik Dahl in Tehran, Zerin Elci in Ankara, Diala Saadeh in Dubai, Dmitry Solovyov in Moscow)
Reuters