Iran
'doesn't need nuclear weapons': president
AFP
LONDON
Petroleumworld.com
09 13 07
Iran is not looking to develop nuclear weapons,
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad told Britain's Channel 4 News Wednesday amid continued
global concern at its refusal to halt uranium enrichment.
In a live interview from the grounds of the presidential palace in Tehran, Ahmadinejad
told the broadcaster through a translator: "We don't want a bomb. We are
against bombs, actually...
"From a political point of view, it's not useful... Why do we want a bomb?...
What's the use of it? We don't need it."
In a chaotic interview, in which Ahmadinejad, the presenter and translator often
all spoke at the same time, the Iranian president said there was no reason for
the Islamic republic to stop enriching uranium.
He was speaking after his chief nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani, warned that
a third set of UN sanctions on Iran could put in danger its current co-operation
with international inspectors.
Ahmadinejad earlier told state television in Iran that they will not step down
under pressure.
Iran maintains its uranium enrichment programme is for peaceful, civilian purposes
but the United States and some other Western countries believe it is designed
to develop nuclear weapons.
Elsewhere in the interview, Ahmadinejad hedged on questions about whether Iran
was directly supporting insurgents in neighbouring Iraq, as suspected by both
Britain and the United States.
In another interview, he dismissed suggestions that the United States may be
preparing a military attack on Iran, telling broadcaster ITV News that the "Americans
want to do a lot of things, but they are not able to."
Ahmadinejad also maintained his tough line against Israel, although with language
more measured than his 2005 comment that he wanted to see the Jewish state "wiped
off the map", and was unrepentant over his questioning of the Holocaust.
But he expressed his condolences for British military personnel killed in Iraq.
"We are sorry for your soldiers who have been killed," he told Channel
4.
AFP 12 2039 GMT 09 07
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