/ 17 March 2006

Iran takes firm nuclear stance

Iran reiterated on Friday that its nuclear programme is not up for negotiation, despite possible calls by the United Nations Security Council for it to accede to demands by the UN nuclear watchdog and immediately halt all nuclear enrichment activities.

”We do not hinge our nuclear activities on a negotiation that is not dignified and will not attain our rights,” Iran’s chief nuclear negotiatior, Ali Larijani, was quoted as saying by state news agency Irna.

”We are ready for negotiation, but a negotiation which does not intend to dissuade Iran from having nuclear technology for peaceful purposes. If so we will not accept it,” he told volunteer militia, Basij university instructors.

”The West does not want us to have nuclear technology, but Iran will continue its path with resistance, since it is our legitimate right,” he said. ”We are a member of the Non-Proliferation Treaty, and we are seeking our rights with in it, like all other signatory nations,” said Larijani, secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council.

In an implicit reply to remarks made by the US on the possible preemptive military action against Iran, Larijani said: ”Military threats show how weak they are, since they can fulfill them. We are ready for them and we have the plans for it.”

United States President George Bush restated his belief in preemptive military action in a 49-page National Security Strategy that also warned: ”We may face no greater challenge from a single country than from Iran.”

White House national security adviser Stephen Hadley refused to rule out military force against the Iran but denied that that the blueprint, the first since 2002, was a message for Tehran.

However, the United States on Thursday denied that it was firing a warning shot at Iran by reaffirming its strike-first policy of preemption nearly three years after the start of the war in Iraq.

”We have said it many times, our nuclear programme is a peaceful one. The right of the Iranian people of having it is not negotiable,” Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki told Tehran worshippers in speech before the sermon.

The International Atomic Energy Agency’s ”reporting Iran’s nuclear case to the United Nations Security Council is a politicised move,” Mottaki added.

Meanwhile, the head of Iran’s body Guardian Council vetting body, Ayatollah Ali Janati said: ”They have taken us to the Security Council; they can do what ever they want to do.”

However, he added ”we will resist and we are ready to pay the price.”

Leading the Friday prayer sermon, Janati said ”we have to stand firm since the glory of Islam and Muslims depends on things like this.”

The full council is set to meet on Friday to consider a Franco-British statement calling on Iran to accede to all demands made by the IAEA and immediately halt all nuclear enrichment activities.

The text urges Iran to resume implementation of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty’s Additional Protocol, which allows for wider inspections of a country’s nuclear facilities.

It also requests IAEA head Mohamed ElBaradei to report on Iranian compliance within 14 days.

Larijani said: ”Those who are in a hurry to solve Iran’s issue in two weeks are digging for confrontation with Iran, and in order to counter it we need to unite.” – AFP

 

AFP