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Iran: Parts of package acceptable
QUICKVOTEYOUR E-MAIL ALERTS(CNN) -- Iran says parts of a incentive package designed to try to stop it developing its nuclear program are "acceptable" but other parts need to be "strengthened." The comments from Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi came after five veto-wielding members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany presented the package last week. "We started studying the package the moment it was presented to us. We should evaluate it. There are points which are acceptable. There are points which are ambiguous, and there are points that we believe should be strengthened," said Asefi. The package also contains disincentives if Iran doesn't comply. The Islamic republic says it wants to pursue nuclear power for peaceful purposes, but the United States and the European Union believe it harbors aspirations to build nuclear weapons. U.S. President George W. Bush on Friday repeated warnings of what Iran can expect if it fails to suspend its uranium enrichment program and accept the package. "We've given the Iranians a limited period of time -- weeks not months. ... If they choose not to verifiably suspend their program then there will be action taken in the U.N. Security Council," Bush said. "If they choose not to ... suspend verifiably, there must be a consequence. There must be a sense of urgency on our part to send a common message to them," he said. Bush's comments come in the wake of a tempered threat against Persian Gulf energy shipments recently made by Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. CNN's Shirzad Bozorgmehr contributed to this report
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