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Bush calls on
Iran to ‘come clean’
Foreign Desk Reportr
OMAHA (US)—President Bush, trying to keep pressure on Iran, called on
Tehran Wednesday to “come clean” about the scope of its nuclear
activities or else face diplomatic isolation.
Two days after a new intelligence report said that Iran had halted its
nuclear weapons program four years ago, Bush demanded that Tehran detail
its previous program to develop nuclear weapons “which the Iranian
regime has yet to acknowledge.”“The Iranians have a strategic choice to
make,” he said. “They can come clean with the international community
about the scope of their nuclear activities, and fully accept the
long-standing offer to suspend their enrichment program and come to the
table and negotiate, or they can continue on a path of isolation.”
The administration is worried that the new National Intelligence
Estimate — representing a consensus of all U.S. spy agencies — weakens
its leverage over Iran and its ability to build global pressure on
Tehran to stop its uranium enrichment program. Bush, arriving here on a
campaign fundraising trip, said he had consulted with members of his
national security team, who gave him a report about what Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice and National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley have
learned in talks during the past several days with their counterparts in
Britain, Germany, France and Russia.
“These countries understand that the Iranian nuclear issue is a problem,
and continues to be a problem and must be addressed,” Bush said. Backing
the U.S. intelligence community, Bush said he appreciated its work in
helping people to understand past and present activities in Iran and
helping the administration develop a sound policy.
“It is clear from the latest NIE that the Iranian government has more to
explain about its nuclear intentions and past actions,” Bush said. His
statement Wednesday came a day after a news conference called in part to
react to the new information on Iran’s nuclear activities. Bush’s public
remarks, coupled with frenzied contacts with world leaders by Bush, Rice
and Hadley, show a White House trying to keep the world on board with
its hard line against Tehran — an uphill effort now, according to most
analysts.
Also Wednesday, the White House said the United States will continue
“actively pushing” for a third, tougher round of United Nations
sanctions against Iran. Deputy press secretary Tony Fratto said Iran
continues to hide information, remains in violation of two U.N. Security
Council resolutions, tests ballistic missiles and is enriching uranium.
“Anyone who thinks that the threat from Iran has receded or diminished
is naive and is not paying attention to the facts,” Fratto told
reporters flying aboard Air Force One with Bush en route to Nebraska.
Fratto disputed Iran’s claim that the intelligence estimate was a
vindication for Tehran. “I think that’s absolutely absurd, and Iran
should take no comfort or vindication from the NIE,” he said. He
rejected calls, since the new report, for the administration to enter
into unconditional talks with Iran, something the White House has said
it would only do once Tehran stops enriching uranium.
Tehran says its nuclear program is only for civilian energy purposes. It
says it is allowed to enrich uranium for that reason. Rice, traveling in
Africa Wednesday, questioned the openness of the Iranian government
after President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said the new U.S. intelligence
review amounted to “a final shot” against Tehran’s critics. Rice
declined to respond to Ahmadinejad’s remark, but told reporters in the
Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa that the public release of the NIE
showed the administration was committed to transparent democracy, while
Iran was not.
“I am not going to comment on that comment except to say that what the
National Intelligence Estimate shows, and the transparency with which
the administration released it, is what it means to live in a democracy
and I hope one day that the people of Iran will live in a democracy
too,” she said.
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