 Source: BBC
Source: BBC
Military action against 
Iran would be a "very serious mistake fraught with unpredictable 
consequences", Russia's foreign minister has warned.
Sergei Lavrov said diplomacy, not missile strikes, was the only way to solve the Iranian nuclear problem.
His comments come after Israeli President Shimon Peres said an attack on Iran was becoming more likely. The UN's atomic watchdog is expected to say this week that Iran is secretly developing a nuclear arms capability.
Diplomats say the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) 
report, due for release on Tuesday or Wednesday, will produce compelling
 evidence that Iran will find hard to dispute.
Iran has always insisted that its nuclear program is exclusively to generate power for civilian purposes.
Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi has said the 
alleged evidence is a fabrication and part of a multi-pronged US smear 
campaign against his country.
  Time 'running out' 
Mr Lavrov said it was "far from the first time" Israel had 
threatened strikes against Iran, when asked for his view on Mr Peres' 
recent comments.
"Our position on this issue is well-known: this would be a 
very serious mistake fraught with unpredictable consequences," he told 
reporters.
Mr Lavrov said "the only path for removing 
concerns is to create every possible condition" to resume the talks 
between Iran and six world powers - including Russia - which broke down 
in December last year.
Shimon Peres said on Sunday: "The possibility of a military 
attack against Iran is now closer to being applied than the application 
of a diplomatic option."
"I don't think that any decision has already been made, but 
there is an impression that Iran is getting closer to nuclear weapons," 
he told the Israel Hayom daily.
He made similar comments to Israeli television on Saturday, 
saying:  "I estimate that intelligence services of all these countries 
are looking at the ticking clock, warning leaders that there was not 
much time left.
Diplomats, speaking anonymously, have been briefing journalists on the IAEA's next quarterly report on Iran.
The evidence is said to include intelligence that Iran made 
computer models of a nuclear warhead, as well as satellite images of 
what the IAEA believes is a large steel container used for 
high-explosives tests related to nuclear arms.
The IAEA has reported for some years that there are 
unresolved questions about its programme and has sought clarification of
 Iran's secretive nuclear activities.
Of this week's report, one Western diplomat told Reuters news
 agency: "There are bits of it which clearly can only be for clandestine
 nuclear purposes. It is a compelling case."
Hardline Iranian cleric Ayatollah Ahmad Khatami warned the 
IAEA on Monday not to become "an instrument without will in the hands of
 the United States".
