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Iran warns
West of bloody nose over nuclear issue
Middle East Desk Report
TEHRAN—Iran’s president on Wednesday warned the West to expect a “bloody
nose” over mounting pressure on Iran to halt its sensitive uranium
enrichment activities, state television reported. The five permanent
members of the U.N. Security Council and Germany will meet on April 16
in Shanghai to discuss whether to sweeten incentives they had offered
Iran in 2006 to curb its nuclear program.
In a televised address from the northeastern city of Mashhad, President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad insisted Iran would never abandon its atomic work,
which the West fears is a cover to build nuclear bombs. Iran says its
work is to produce energy. “The Iranian nation will bloody the enemy’s
(the West’s) nose if they want to violate an iota of our rights (to
nuclear technology),” he said without elaborating. The Security Council
has imposed three rounds of sanctions on Iran for refusing council’s
demand to suspend its uranium enrichment activities, which can be used
to make fuel for power plants or atomic bombs, if refined much further.
Iran, which says it wants nuclear technology to generate electricity,
has so far ruled out halting or limiting its nuclear work in exchange
for trade and other incentives, and says it will only negotiate with the
U.N. nuclear watchdog.
“We are standing firm and the West’s misbehavior towards Iran, will
encourage the nation to capture higher summits,” the president said to
chants of “Death to America” by the crowd. “The nation will slap you in
the mouth.”
Accelerating activity that could give Tehran the means to make atom
bombs in the future if it wants to, Iran said on Tuesday it had begun
installing 6,000 new centrifuges at its Natanz uranium enrichment plant
and said it had tested a “new generation” of centrifuges. Iran, the
world’s fourth largest oil exporter, launched 3,000 centrifuges, a basis
for industrial scale enrichment, in Natanz. But they are a 1970s-vintage
design, prone to breakdown.
Washington said Tehran’s move showed its intention to ignore Security
Council demands to halt sensitive nuclear work and France suggested
major powers may have to toughen sanctions on the Islamic Republic. U.S.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said incentives offered to Iran in
2006 if it halted uranium enrichment, including civil nuclear
cooperation, had been “very generous.”
But Russia, which is building Iran’s first nuclear power plant, said
“new positive proposals” should be put to Iran. The United States has
not ruled out military action to stop Iran’s nuclear activities and
Israel has repeatedly urged the international community to stop Tehran’s
atomic work. Ahmadinejad said imposing sanctions on Iran would have no
results for the West. “It will not weaken our nation’s will ... the era
of oppression is finished,” Ahmadinejad said. President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad is to sack Iran’s economy and interior ministers, in the
latest changes to the cabinet just after parliamentary elections, his
spokesman said on Wednesday.
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