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Iran warns Israel against attack
DAMASCUS—Iran’s parliament speaker warned Israel against any attempt to
attack its nuclear facilities, and promised to “teach it a lesson” if it
did. “If Israel does something stupid and attacks our nuclear facilities
like it did in Iraq, we promise to teach it a lesson it will never
forget,” Gholam Ali Hadad-Adel said after talks with his Syrian
counterpart in Damascus.
He was referring to a 1981 strike by Israel against the Osiraq nuclear
reactor in Iraq, which the Jewish state suspected of developing atomic
weapons. “We will not give in,” Hadad Adel said, citing the “right” of
all countries to use nuclear energy for civilian energy purposes under
the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
In an escalating crisis over Iran’s nuclear ambitions, Tehran has
rejected proposals that it abandon fuel cycle technology in return for
incentives and has resumed uranium conversion work in defiance of a
suspension agreement with Britain, France and Germany. Iran insists its
activities are peaceful but faces accusations it is developing nuclear
energy as a cover for a weapons programme. The International Atomic
Energy Agency last month adopted a resolution that found Iran in
“non-compliance” with nuclear proliferation safeguards — an automatic
trigger for taking the matter to the Security Council. Iran threatened
Tuesday to retaliate by blocking tough inspections of its nuclear sites
and resuming uranium enrichment activities.
Israel, which has long warned against Iran’s nuclear ambitions, has not
signed the NPT and is believed to be the only nuclear power in the
Middle East, though it neither confirms nor denies reports that it has
about 200 nuclear warheads. Since Saddam Hussein’s regime was ousted
from Iraq in April 2003, Israel has viewed Iran as it prime enemy in the
region.—Agencies
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