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Ahmadinejad calls for wiping Israel off the map
Foreign Desk Report
TEHRAN (Iran)—Iran’s hard-line president called for Israel to be “wiped
off the map” and said a new wave of Palestinian attacks will destroy the
Jewish state, state-run media reported Wednesday.
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad also denounced attempts to recognize
Israel or normalize relations with it. “There is no doubt that the new
wave (of attacks) in Palestine will wipe off this stigma (Israel) from
the face of the Islamic world,” Ahmadinejad told students Wednesday
during a Tehran conference called “The World without Zionism”.
“Anybody who recognizes Israel will burn in the fire of the Islamic
nation’s fury, (while) any (Islamic leader) who recognizes the Zionist
regime means he is acknowledging the surrender and defeat of the Islamic
world,” Ahmadinejad said. Ahmadinejad also repeated the words of the
founder of Iran’s Islamic revolution, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who
called for the destruction of Israel.
“As the imam said, Israel must be wiped off the map,” said Ahmadinejad,
who came to power in August and replaced Mohammad Khatami, a reformist
who advocated international dialogue and tried to improve Iran’s
relations with the West.
Ahmadinejad referred to Israel’s recent withdrawal from the Gaza Strip
as a “trick,” saying Gaza was already a part of Palestinian lands and
the pullout was designed to win acknowledgment of Israel by Islamic
states.
“The fighting in Palestine is a war between the (whole) Islamic nation
and the world of arrogance,” Ahmadinejad said, using Tehran’s propaganda
epithet for the United States and Israel. “Today, Palestinians are
representing the Islamic nation against arrogance.” Iran does not
recognize the existence of Israel and has often called for its
destruction.
Israel has been at the forefront of nations calling and end to Iran’s
nuclear program, which the United States and many others in the West say
is aimed at acquiring weapons of mass destruction. Iran says the program
is for
generating electricity. White House press secretary Scott McClellan said
Ahmadinejad’s comment “reconfirms what we have been saying about the
regime in Iran. It underscores the concerns we have about Iran’s nuclear
intentions”. French Foreign Minister Jean-Baptiste Mattei condemned
Ahmadinejad’s remarks “with the utmost firmness.” Harsh words for Israel
are common in Iran, especially at this time of year, the end of the
Muslim holy month of Ramadan. In Iran, this Friday — the last Muslim day
of prayer in the Ramadan holiday — has been declared Quds Day, or
Jerusalem Day. Rallies were slated in support of Palestinians — and
against Israel’s occupation of parts of the city and other Palestinian
lands. Other Iranian politicians also have issued anti-Israeli
statements, in attempts to whip up support for Friday’s nationwide Quds
Day demonstrations.
But Ahmadinejad’s strident anti-Israeli statements on the eve of the
demonstration were harsher than those issued during the term of the
reformist Khatami and harkened back to Khomeini’s fiery speeches.
Ahmadinejad was a longtime member of Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards,
which even operates a division dubbed the Quds Division, a rhetorical
reference to Tehran’s hopes of one day ending Israel’s domination of
Islam’s third-holiest city. After his election, Ahmadinejad received the
support of the powerful hard-line Revolutionary Guards, who report
directly to supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Last year, a senior
member of the guards attended a meeting that called for and accepted
applications for suicide bombers to target U.S. troops and Israelis.
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