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Iran rules out return to full nuke freeze
Foreign Desk Report
TEHRAN—Iran will not return to a full freeze of its disputed nuclear
fuel activities and Western demands for such confidence building
measures are unacceptable, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said.
In a speech to members of the hardline Basij militia, the austere
hardliner also played down an international outcry over his
controversial call for Israel to be “wiped off the map” by insisting
what he said was nothing new.
Although the President lashed out at what he called “an illegal
occupying regime”, he did not repeat his call for Israel to be destroyed
and the foreign ministry also kept up its effort to limit the diplomatic
fall-out.
Ahmadinejad’s use of the revolutionary-era slogan, which has not been
employed by senior regime officials for years, has renewed concerns over
the Islamic republic’s bid to make nuclear reactor fuel — work that
could potentially be diverted to make weapons.
But the President, who won a shock election victory in June, maintained
his uncompromising stance in the face of Western demands that Iran
abandon such technology. “We support the resumption of work at the UCF
(uranium conversion facility) and we will continue,” Ahmadinejad said,
rejecting demands that Iran return to a full freeze agreed to in
November 2004 in a deal with Britain, France and Germany.
“The previous government backed down in the name of confidence building
so much that they voluntarily suspended the fuel cycle,” he complained.
“Recently the government realised that this confidence building claim is
wrong”.
In August, Iran refused an EU offer of trade and other incentives in
exchange for halting uranium enrichment work and resumed uranium
conversion. The country insists it only wants to generate electricity,
but last month the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) found Iran
to be in “non-compliance” with the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) —
paving the way for a Security Council referral — and urged Iran to
return to a full suspension. The next IAEA meeting is just a month away.
But reacting to Western pressure against Iran, Ahmadinejad said: “They
are lying and they don’t want the Islamic republic to have the fuel
cycle.” Enrichment work, Ahmadinejad insisted, was “100-percent lawful
and there was no deviation” towards military purposes.
“It is a big lie that Iran has concealed things for 18 years,” he
asserted, even though Iran has openly admitted having failed to report
the full scale of its nuclear activities and black market shopping to
the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Iran came clean on its
activities in 2003, maintaining that it had been left with no choice but
to conceal given the country is subject to almost constant US pressure
and sanctions. An IAEA probe has since found evidence of suspect
activities but no “smoking gun” that proves a weapons drive.
Speaking with a Palestinian scarf around his neck and flanked by
sandbags, Ahmadinejad also brushed off condemnation of his fiercely
anti-Israeli speech, which was given Wednesday to a conference entitled
“A World without Zionism”. “We only repeated the words of the last 27
years which were the stances of the Imam, and the supreme leader and
Islamic nation. It was very clear,” Ahmadinejad said, in what could be
interpreted as an effort to calm the storm. But he nevertheless went on
to blast efforts “to make the world recognise the existence of an
illegal occupying regime”, drawing chants from the audience of “Down
with Israel”!
“Today, under the pretext of the Gaza pullout, they want to force a few
countries to recognise this country. The ones who do that must know that
they are standing in front of Islamic nations and that it is an
unforgivable crime.” The Iranian Foreign Ministry also kept up its
efforts to ease tensions, the day after asserting the Islamic republic
was not out to attack Israel. “The position of the Islamic republic
regarding the illegal Zionist regime has been very clear since the
Islamic revolution (in 1979): we do not recognise this regime and that
is our diplomatic right,” foreign ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi
told the official news agency IRNA. “We want free elections in the
occupied Palestinian territories with the participation of all
inhabitants, be they Jews, Muslims or Christians”.
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