/ 24 April 2006

Iran defies UN on nuclear drive

Iran’s hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Monday rejected a United Nations Security Council demand to halt sensitive nuclear work and warned that the Islamic republic could quit the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

In a show of defiance just days away from a Friday deadline set by the Security Council for Iran to freeze uranium enrichment, Ahmadinejad confidently dismissed the threat of sanctions or even a United States military attack.

And in his latest vitriolic attack against arch-enemy Israel, the firebrand leader said the ”fake” Jewish state ”cannot survive” and called on migrants to the country to go back to where they came from.

”They shouldn’t think they can baptise a wrong decision with the help of the Security Council,” he said of demands that Iran freeze enrichment, at the centre of Western fears the Islamic regime could acquire nuclear weapons. ”The Security Council should act within the framework of the law. It’s not true that whatever they issue we follow.”

Iran says it only wants to enrich uranium to make reactor fuel to generate electricity, as is authorised by the NPT.

But the Security Council wants a suspension of the work — which can be extended to make weapons — pending the completion of a now three-year-old probe by the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

”Our policy is to work within the NPT and the agency,” Ahmadinejad told a news conference. ”But if we see that they don’t want to accept our rights, we will reconsider.”

The IAEA, he also complained, ”hasn’t done anything but cause nuisance”.

When asked if any incentives could prompt Iran to reinstate a suspension of its nuclear work, he replied: ”We don’t want anything. Let the Iranians live their lives.”

The regime’s increasingly defiant stance leaves it exposed to the risk of UN sanctions. The US has also not ruled out the possibility of taking military action against the oil-rich Islamic republic.

”I see it as unlikely that they would be so unwise to do such a thing,” Ahmadinejad replied when asked about the impact on Iran’s economy if sanctions are imposed. ”Those two or three countries who are so against us have enough sense not to make that mistake. They cannot create limitations for us. They will lose themselves. Our economic infrastructure is strong.

”A military attack does not make sense. Besides, our people are powerful and can defend themselves,” he argued, before firing off a stiff warning to Washington.

”If they even talk about it, their situation will be very bad. This is all psychological pressure and propaganda that they use in the form of words in the media to try make us back down.”

Iran’s defence minister also warned the US that it risked a ”disgraceful defeat” if it took military action.

”If the US chooses the military option, a disgraceful defeat worse than the failure in Tabas desert awaits them,” Mostafa Mohammad Najar said, referring to a failed US attempt in 1980 to rescue American hostages in the seized US embassy in Tehran.

Ahmadinejad, who triggered outrage last year with his call for Israel to be ”wiped off the map”, also continued his verbal barrage against the Jewish state. ”Logically, this fake regime cannot survive,” he said, adding that Jews who have settled in the former Palestine ”will return to their motherland”.

He also appeared to dismiss comparisons being made in the West between himself and Adolf Hitler.

”You propagate that what’s-his-name is like that criminal,” Ahmadinejad said. ”When we say let the Palestinian people decide, they say this person supports killing Jews.”

He added that Iran was the ”only country where religious minorities have equal rights”.

Ahmadinejad also said Germany should stop being ”bribed by a bunch of Zionists” — referring to German reparations for the Holocaust.

”Today’s generation of Germany — what have they done wrong that they have to be belittled? Why should they be born indebted politically, culturally and economically and bribed by a bunch of Zionists in order to suppress Palestinians?” he said.

”This is not fair. I have no doubt the great nation of Germany will not accept this.” — AFP

 

AFP