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Iran
in 'position of power' in nuclear dispute: president

Iran's
nuclear material
By
Stefan
Smith
AFP
TEHRAN
Petroleumworld.com
04 14 06
Iranian leaders Friday brushed off the threat of sanctions or military
attack over their controversial nuclear drive, insisting the West was
powerless to halt the Islamic republic.
The tough rhetoric came after the regime dismissed appeals from UN's
atomic watchdog chief Mohamed ElBaradei to freeze its uranium enrichment
programme and calm suspicions it is seeking the bomb.
"Today, thank God, the Iranian nation is a powerful one and we
are going to have a dialogue with the world from a position of power,"
Ahmadinejad said in a speech in the northeast of the country.
"Everything we have is from God, and a few weaklings cannot stand
against the Iranian people," he said.
ElBaradei's trip to Tehran on Thursday came in the wake of Iran's announcement
that its scientists had successfully enriched uranium to make nuclear
fuel, despite a UN Security Council demand for the work to be halted
by April 28.
Iran says it only wants to generate atomic energy, but enrichment can
be extended to make the fissile core of a nuclear warhead. ElBaradei
said talks on the demand would continue, although Iran was showing no
sign of any readiness to compromise.
Top regime cleric Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati said in a Friday prayer sermon
that the United States was a "decaying power" and pointed
out that Iran was "not Iraq or Afghanistan."
"The enemy should know Iran is not comparable to any country in
the world. Now we are much more powerful than before," said the
head of Iran's Guardian Council, a powerful political watchdog.
"Don't be intimidated by their threats. They don't have the stamina
to do anything," Jannati said.
The IAEA chief must give a report at the end of April on Iranian compliance
with the Security Council deadline. After three years of investigations,
the IAEA says it is still not in a position to say if Iran's ambitions
are peaceful.
ElBaradei said Thursday "the picture is still hazy and not very
clear".
In Washington, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice called for UN
Security Council action and highlighted part of the UN charter that
allows sanctions to escalate into military action.
"There is no doubt that Iran continues to defy the will of the
international community," Rice said. "When the Security Council
reconvenes, there will have to be some consequence for that action."
She suggested chapter seven of the UN Charter which sets out specific
action that can be taken when there is a threat to international peace
or an act of aggression.
"One thing the Security Council has, and the IAEA does not have,
is the ability to compel, through chapter seven resolutions, member
states of the UN to obey the will of the international system,"
Rice said.
"And I'm certain that we'll look at measures that could be taken
to ensure that Iran knows that they really have no choice but to comply."
The US chief diplomat did not specifically call for any particular measure.
US leaders this week said that reports of planned military action against
Iraq were "wild speculation".
But chapter seven allows for a gradual increase of international pressure,
up to military action.
Several resolutions adopted by the UN Security Council against Iraq,
before the US-led invasion of March 2003, were taken under chapter seven.
Article 41 of the chapter allows for sanctions, including economic and
transport measures or the severance of diplomatic relations, and Article
42 states that if those measures fail, the UN Security Council "may
take such action by air, sea, or land forces as may be necessary to
maintain or restore international peace and security".
"There is no doubt that Iran has continued salami-slicing tactics
-- a little bit here, and then a little bit more, and then a little
bit more -- despite the fact that the international community has said
very clearly, 'Stop'," said Rice.
Representatives of the five permanent members of the Security Council
plus Germany are to meet in Moscow next Tuesday to discuss the crisis.
Although the United States has been prodding the council to take a tough
stand against the Islamic republic, including possible sanctions, it
has run into opposition from veto-wielding members Russia and China.
AFP
04 13 06 0919 GMT
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© 1994-2006 Agence France-Presse. All Rights Reserved.
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