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Iran sends
defiant message to West on revolution day
TEHRAN—Iran aims to send a satellite into space next summer and will not
retreat in a nuclear row with the West, its president said on Monday, in
a defiant speech on the anniversary of the country’s 1979 Islamic
revolution. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad addressed a major rally in
Tehran a week after Iran sparked international concern by test-launching
a rocket designed to carry its first domestically made research
satellite into orbit.
“God willing, next summer the first 100 percent Iranian-made satellite
will be positioned in orbit,” he said. The West fears Tehran is covertly
trying to obtain nuclear bombs. Iran, the world’s fourth-largest oil
exporter, says it needs nuclear energy to meet booming electricity
demand.
The technology used to put satellites into space could also be used for
launching weapons, analysts say, and both the United States and Russia
have expressed concern about the rocket test. Russia, which has long
argued there is no evidence Tehran is seeking atomic weapons, and which
is supplying fuel for its Bushehr nuclear power station, said the test
raised suspicions about the real nature of Iran’s atomic program.
But Ahmadinejad made clear Iran would press ahead with its satellite
work, signaling it would carry out two more such tests to prepare for
the real launch. State media last week said the research satellite,
called Omid (Hope), would be launched by March 2009. Ahmadinejad also
said Iran would not back down in the nuclear dispute with the West,
despite the threat of a third round of U.N. sanctions on the Islamic
Republic over its refusal to halt sensitive atomic work.
“They should know that the Iranian nation will not retreat one iota from
its nuclear rights,” he told the crowd which had gathered in the capital
for the 29th anniversary of the revolution that toppled the U.S.-backed
shah.
Iranian officials had called on people to turn out in large numbers to
show their unity in the face of Western pressure. State television
broadcast footage of rallies held across Iran.
The official IRNA news agency said Ahmadinejad was addressing a
“million-strong gathering” but it was not immediately possible to
confirm this figure. “America should understand and believe that the
Iranian nation will not back down from its rights,” demonstrator Leila
Jafari told Reuters. Others at the rally burnt effigies representing
Uncle Sam. Iran has an array of medium-range missiles. It says its
longest-range missile can reach 2,000 km (1,250 miles), meaning it could
hit Israel and U.S. military bases in the Gulf.
U.S. officials have accused Iran of aiming to equip its missiles with
nuclear warheads. Iran says its nuclear program is designed only to
generate electricity and preserve its oil and gas for export. Coinciding
with the revolution anniversary, Iran displayed one of three British
patrol boats which were seized in the Gulf in 2004, Iranian media
reported. They were previously shown to —Agencies
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