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No trust on Iran’s nuke technology, says Rice
WASHINGTON—Iran has shown through the actions of its hardline leadership
that it cannot be trusted with technology that could lead to a nuclear
weapon, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has said.
Questioned about the international response after Iran’s President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Israel should be “wiped off the map” and that
the Holocaust was a “myth”, Rice told the Fox News channel that she
expected Iran’s nuclear programme to be referred to the UN Security
Council but would not set a deadline for action.
“The more we hear from this Iranian government, the more that people
recognize and acknowledge publicly that this is a government that
shouldn’t expect the international community to trust them with
technologies that might lead to a nuclear weapon,” she said Sunday.
Questioned about the prospect of international sanctions, Rice told the
Fox News channel: “I’m convinced that this will end up in the Security
Council if Iran doesn’t change course, and I see no evidence that Iran
will change course.” The US administration has been saying for several
months that it wants action before the United Nations, while supporting
efforts by Britain, France and Germany to negotiate with Iran over its
plan to enrich uranium for what it insists is a peaceful nuclear
programme. “Diplomacy takes some time, and it is important that we do
this at a time of our choosing,” Rice said. Ahmadinejad, an
ultra-conservative elected in June, has caused international outrage
with a series of anti-Israeli remarks.—Agencies
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