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Iran says US
failing in Middle East
Middle East Desk Report
TEHRAN—Iran accused the United States on Sunday of interfering in the
Middle East after President George W. Bush said he would press allies to
help keep Iran’s “aggressive ambitions” in check during a regional trip
this week.
“The aim of these repeated trips is to compensate for the failed
policies of America in the region,” Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman
Mohammad Ali Hosseini told a news conference.
He said Washington, which is leading efforts to isolate the Islamic
Republic over its disputed nuclear ambitions, was “interfering in the
relations of countries in the region” but that Iran had nevertheless
boosted ties with its neighbors.
“America has not been successful in isolating Iran,” he said. “We are
witnessing the expansion of Iran’s relations with different countries.”
Bush will travel to Israel and the Palestinian West Bank as he tries to
help the two sides reach a peace agreement. But he will focus on Iran
when he visits five regional allies — Kuwait, Egypt, Saudi Arabia,
United Arab Emirates and Bahrain.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad last month became the first
president from non-Arab Shi’ite Iran to attend a summit of Gulf Arab
states, which worry that Tehran might one day use nuclear arms to
dominate the region. “I will discuss the importance of countering the
aggressive ambitions of Iran,” Bush said on Saturday about his Middle
East trip. “And I will assure them that America’s commitment to the
security of our friends in the region is strong and enduring.”
The United States has accused Iran of trying to develop nuclear weapons
under the cover of a civilian energy program, a charge Tehran has
denied. A U.S. intelligence report in December found Iran had halted its
weapons program in 2003. Bush said in an interview with Reuters on
Thursday he would explain the U.S. National Intelligence Estimate to the
allies and that he still viewed Iran as a danger.
The United States severed ties with Tehran shortly after Iran’s 1979
Islamic Revolution. Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
suggested on Thursday that ties might one day be possible with
Washington, although he said it would harm Iran to restore relations
now.
Hosseini said: “In regards to the continuation of America’s hostile
policies towards Iran, we have no plans to normalize relations with
America and this issue is not on the agenda.” Iranian leaders have often
said they would not establish ties with the United States unless
Washington changes its behavior towards the Islamic Republic.
Iran has expelled a German diplomat for “undiplomatic” behavior, the
Foreign Ministry said Sunday in the wake of a report that Germany had
expelled an Iranian consular attache last July. “Responsible authorities
recognized that this person was engaging in undiplomatic behavior and
has to leave Iran,” ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini told
reporters during his weekly briefing, without revealing the diplomat’s
name or giving any additional information.
A German Foreign Ministry spokeswoman said late Saturday that she could
only “confirm that a German diplomat has left Iran,” but declined to
elaborate. The German weekly Der Spiegel, citing no sources, reported
last month that an Iranian consular attache had been expelled last July.
The diplomat, identified only as Mohraramali D., had contacted a
specialist firm in Bavaria, apparently in hopes of buying a component
that could be used in the uranium enrichment process, Der Spiegel
reported.
The Foreign Ministry in Berlin refused to confirm the report at the time
and declined to do so again Saturday. Iran has declined to comment on
the report. Germany is one of the countries negotiating with Iran over
Tehran’s nuclear program, which the U.S. and others fear intends to
build nuclear weapons. Iran insists its nuclear program is peaceful. The
relationship between Germany and Iran has been strained at times since
Iran’s 1979 revolution. The two were once major trading partners but
relations were frozen after a German court ruled in 1997 that the 1992
shooting deaths of four Iranian Kurdish dissidents in Berlin had been
ordered at the highest levels in Tehran.
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