/ 18 April 2007

Iran will ‘cut off hand’ of any attacker

Iran’s army will ”cut off the hand” of any attacker and is at the ready to fulfil its defensive duties, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Wednesday during an annual military parade.

Iran is embroiled in a row with the West over its nuclear ambitions. The United States, which says Iran is trying to build an atomic bomb, has said it wants a diplomatic resolution to the stand-off but has not ruled out military action if that fails.

”The army stands against any aggressor and will cut off its hand,” the president said in a televised address before troops, tanks, missiles and other military hardware paraded passed.

He made a similar remark in last year’s annual ceremony saying Iran would ”cut off the hands of any aggressors”.

Written above the president’s podium were the words: ”Peaceful nuclear technology is a fundamental and basic need for our country.”

Iran, the world’s fourth largest oil exporter, insists it does not seek a nuclear weapon and says it wants to master nuclear technology so it can generate electricity.

Ahmadinejad’s statement this month that Iran had begun work to make nuclear fuel on an industrial scale drew condemnation from the West and was a snub to the United Nations Security Council which has demanded Tehran halt all such uranium enrichment work.

The United States has warned Iran it could face further sanctions, which would follow two previous UN sanctions resolutions. The first resolution was passed in December.

Top Iranian officials have brushed off the impact of sanctions and say Iran is ready for any eventuality.

”To fulfill its responsibilities, [the army] is is at full readiness,” the president said, describing Iran’s military as a defensive rather than offensive force.

”Our army is self sufficient … and is at the service of peace, brotherhood and security in the region,” he added.

Parachutists dropped down from planes over the parade area near the tomb of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic. Close by are tens of thousands of graves of those who died in the 1980 to 1988 Iran-Iraq war.

Tanks and armoured personnel carriers loaded onto trucks were driven past, along with a range of missiles, unmanned surveillance aircraft and two-man submarines with men wearing aqualungs standing next to them.

The television commentator described some of the equipment on show as Nazeat-6, heat-seeking Sidewinder and radar-guided Sparrow missiles. A land-to-sea Raad missile was also towed past on a truck.

Iran did not show off its longest range missile, the Shahab-3, which it says can hit targets 2 000km away, putting Israel or US bases in the Gulf in range. – Reuters