German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle attends at press conference after his meeting with International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Mohammed El Baradei on November 25, 2009 in Vienna. (Samuel Kubani/AFP/Getty Images)
World powers want Iran to accept a fuel deal that would see it ship low-enriched uranium abroad for reprocessing to help ease tensions. Iran has yet to give a formal reply.
German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle (L) and International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Mohammed El Baradei (R) answer to journalists' questions during a press conference after their meeting on November 25, 2009 in Vienna. (Samuel Kubani/AFP/Getty Images)
"Frankly, a nuclear-armed Iran is not acceptable," Westerwelle said.
The West fears Iran's nuclear programme is aimed at atomic bomb-making capability. Iran denies this.
German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle (L) looks as IAEA Director General Mohammed El Baradei as he answers media questions. (Samuel Kubani/AFP/Getty Images)
Westerwelle also confirmed that six powers has drawn up an IAEA draft resolution urging Iran to clarify the purpose of its previously secret uranium enrichment site and confirm it has no more hidden atomic work.
Backed by the United States, Germany, France, Britain, Russia and China, the draft is to be presented at the meeting of agency's 35-nation governing board that starts on Thursday.
IAEA Director General Egyptian Mohammed El Baradei said the powers should wait for Iran to take a viable stance on the fuel plan because Iran posed no imminent nuclear threat. (Samuel Kubani/AFP/Getty Images)
The resolution could meet resistance from a developing nation bloc which includes Iran and makes up nearly half the board. But Westerwelle said he was confident.
"We are hoping for broad support at the board of governors meeting," he said.
A senior developing nation diplomat said the resolution could pass. "I think (it) has a majority, but it could backfire. Iran is already cooperating within their limited legal parameters. So this measure might just boost the hardliners in Tehran."
In an interview with Reuters, ElBaradei said mistrust had grown since Iran revealed a previously covert nuclear site.
He also said Iran's insistence on changing a nuclear fuel deal could not be accepted by Western powers because it would not reduce its enriched uranium stockpile.
But ElBaradei said the powers should wait for Iran to take a viable stance on the fuel plan because it posed no imminent nuclear threat.







