Brussels, 25/08/2005 (Agence Europe) - Iran risks being reported to the United Nations Security Council following its relaunch of uranium conversion at Ispahan on 8 August 2005, and on a state television channel on 24 August, the new Iranian President, Mahmud Ahmadinejad said he wanted to continue negotiating the nuclear issue with Europeans, promising to come up with innovative proposals. After a vote of confidence at the Iranian parliament, the President said he wanted to defend Iran's legitimate interests under international law, but wanted negotiations to continue, adding that he had innovative new proposals to make about nuclear fuel destined for a peaceful use of nuclear energy. Experts are applying the final touches to the ideas and details would be forthcoming. The day before, irritated by Iran's resumption of uranium conversion which it sees as breaking the November 2004 Paris agreement, and also by Iran's rejection of its 'concrete cooperation proposals', the EU3 (France, Germany and the UK) announced the cancellation of a negotiating meeting scheduled for 31 August (see EUROPE 9012). According to diplomats at the Vienna headquarters of the United Nations' International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Washington is continuing to pressurise the IAEA to send Iran to the United Nations Security Council if it does not suspend all nuclear activity by 3 September, the date when the IAEA is due to submit a report on nuclear power in Iran. The same sources suggest the United States is working behind the scenes to establish consensus among the 35 members of the IAEA board of governors and gain support from Russia, China, South Africa, India and other non-aligned countries which do not want to send Iran to the Security Council because uranium enrichment (conversion is the first stage in enrichment) is authorised by the Non-Proliferation Treaty monitored by the IAEA.