|
Iran to
resist to end on nuke issue: Nejad
Foreign Desk Report
TEHRAN—President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has vowed that Iran would “resist
to the end” on its nuclear programme, after sparking fresh Western
concern by revealing plans to massively ramp up sensitive atomic work.
“The Iranian people will resist to the end to defend their nuclear
right,” Ahmadinejad told thousands of supporters in a speech in Sanandaj,
the capital of Iran’s Kurdestan province, broadcast live on state
television Wednesday.
“Thanks to God, time is on Iran’s side and with every passing day they
(the great powers) are having to take a step backwards and recognise
Iran’s right while the Iranian people take a step forward to the summit
of technology.”
Ahmadinejad on Tuesday said Iran was ultimately aiming to install 60,000
centrifuges to enrich uranium to make nuclear fuel on an industrial
scale, which the United States said would be enough to make a nuclear
weapon.
Iran insists its nuclear programme is peaceful and that it has every
right to the full nuclear fuel cycle, rejecting US accusations that its
civilian energy drive masks a programme to make a nuclear bomb.
US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack described Ahmadinejad’s
remarks — made at a news conference Tuesday — as a “cold jolt” adding
that “what that leads to is an Iranian nuclear weapon”.
The installation of 60,000 centrifuges would take several years but
would enable the Islamic republic to enrich uranium on an industrial
scale to make its own nuclear fuel.
Iran had previously said it is looking to install 3,000 centrifuges by
March 2007. It currently has two cascades of 164 centrifuges apiece at
its Natanz plant to enrich uranium on a research scale.
The United States is leading a drive to impose UN sanctions against Iran
over its failure to suspend uranium enrichment, but has hit stalemate
amid opposition from China and Russia to a European-proposed draft
resolution.
Uranium enrichment can be used both to produce nuclear fuel and make the
warhead of an atomic bomb. Iran can currently enrich uranium to levels
of 5 percent, enough for fuel, but a bomb requires levels of some 90
percent.
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert of Israel, Iran’s arch-enemy, said in Los
Angeles the world had “reached the pivotal moment of truth” on Iran’s
nuclear programme and warned “we cannot afford to wait”.
The latest report by the UN nuclear watchdog obtained by AFP in Vienna
on Tuesday mentioned the presence of traces of plutonium, a possible
weapons material, at an Iranian waste storage site.
The body said it was now examining Iran’s response to the findings.
However Ali Asghar Soltanieh, Iran’s representative to the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), played down the report, which he said
contained nothing new.
“The report proves that the case will go on normally at the IAEA and
this document shows that there is no justification for Security Council
intervention or interference from any other organisation,” he told state
radio.
The report also urged full Iranian cooperation with the IAEA as “a
prerequisite for the agency to be able to confirm the peaceful nature of
Iran’s nuclear programme”.
The Kurdestan speech by Ahmadinejad, who ditched his trademark beige
jacket for a traditional Kurdish coat for the occasion, was his first in
his latest regional tour aimed at bringing the government’s message to
the people.
He also issued a warning to the Democrats, the political rivals of US
President George W. Bush who seized control of Congress in elections
earlier this month, to force a drastic change in US policy on the Middle
East.
“The (current) failure is that of American policy, a policy of
aggression, intervention and the utilisation of force. I tell those who
recently came to power that if you do the same, the same destiny awaits
you.” |