Iran says it’s cutting oil exports to France, Britain

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BEIRUT (MCT) — Iran said Sunday that it was cutting off oil exports to France and Britain in a pre-emptive strike against European economic sanctions, while top U.S. and British officials warned against a military attack on Iran’s disputed nuclear program.

Iran’s retaliatory oil ban was the latest instance of high-stakes brinkmanship surrounding Tehran’s nuclear ambitions. Iran says its program is solely for peaceful purposes, but the U.S. and many of its allies suspect the goal is to develop weapons.

Speculation has intensified in recent weeks about a possible Israeli or U.S. strike on Iranian nuclear sites, even as an apparent shadow war rages featuring assassinations of Iranian scientists, sabotage of Iran’s nuclear technology and recent bomb plots that targeted Israeli diplomats in India and Georgia and, authorities suspect, in Thailand.

On Sunday, British Foreign Minister William Hague and Army Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, made a conscious effort to cool down the rhetoric, backing the current recipe of diplomacy and economic sanctions against Iran to resolve the looming crisis. Their message seemed as much aimed at Israel as the Iranians.

“None of us want Iran to have nuclear weapons. (But) I don’t think it would be a wise thing at this moment ... for Israel to launch a military attack on Iran,” Hague told the BBC. “I think Israel like everyone else in the world should be giving a real chance to the approach we’ve adopted of very serious economic sanctions and diplomatic pressure and the readiness to negotiate with Iran.”

Across the Atlantic, Dempsey suggested that Iran could still be dissuaded from pursuing nuclear weapons. “We think the current path we’re on is the most prudent path at this point,” Dempsey said on the CNN program “Fareed Zakaria GPS.”

The Joint Chiefs chairman voiced concern that an Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear infrastructure could prompt Tehran to retaliate against U.S. targets in the Persian Gulf or Afghanistan, where the U.S.-led war against the Taliban continues.

An Israeli attack could set back Iran’s nuclear program “probably for a couple of years,” Dempsey acknowledged, echoing testimony given to a Senate committee last week by James R. Clapper, director of National Intelligence. But Dempsey made it clear that U.S. policymakers considered such a move “destabilizing.”

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