The IAEA Board of Governors has voted in favor of a resolution that finds Iran’s noncompliance with its NPT obligations to be “within the competence of the Security Council,” but does not appear to refer the issue the Security Council … yet.

IAEA DG Mohamed ElBaradei described the issue as remaining in Vienna:

I think what I heard today at the Board is encouraging. Everyone acknowledged that the issue remains very much here in Vienna, that there is ample room here, still, for negotiations, that the issue has not been deferred to the Security Council and that a number of countries have indicated their readiness to work with Iran and with the European Union to try to find a way for Iran to go back into the negotiating process with the European Union.

Javad Vaidi, senior member of Iran’s delegation to the IAEA Board of Governors session, called the vote a failure for the West, but Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi told ISNA that “Iran’s answer will be announced after the return of the Iranian team from Vienna and necessary reviews.”

Mark Landler cited diplomats in the New York Times saying Iranian officials showed them unsigned letters threatening to resume uranium enrichment at a plant in Natanz and withdraw from the Additional Protocol.

***

Mehr published the confidential vote (which squares with reports from Xinhua and Associated Press):

For GOV/2005/77 Against Abstain
Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Canada, Ecuador, France, Germany, Ghana, Hungary, India, Italy, Japan, Korea, Netherlands, Peru, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Singapore, Sweden, UK, and USA Venezuela Algeria, Brazil, China, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Russia, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Tunisia, Vietnam and Yemen
22 1 12

The decision by India to vote with the US is notable, if only because Washington placed so much pressure on New Delhi. The Calcutta Telegraph has some backstory.

Late Update: Gearity is thoughtful, as usual.