| 
Spanish:
Bolivia
Venezuela
Trinidad
&
Caribbean










|
|
Iran threatens to hide nuclear programme

By
Siavosh
Ghazi
AFP
TEHRAN
Petroleumworld.com
04 26 06
Iran warned Tuesday it will sever relations with the UN atomic watchdog
if sanctions are imposed over its nuclear drive and vowed a military
attack would merely send its activities underground.
The tough rhetoric triggered accusations from the White House that Iran
was seeking to escalate the standoff ahead of a UN deadline Friday for
the Islamic regime to freeze uranium enrichment.
"It's time for the Security Council to look at the next step,"
White House spokesman Scott McLellan said. "It's time for the Security
Council to look at what action needs to be taken for this regime's continued
defiance."
Although Tehran has so far refused to comply with the demands, diplomats
in Vienna said Iran's Atomic Energy Organisation chief Gholam Reza Aghazadeh
would hold last-minute talks Wednesday with the UN's nuclear watchdog.
The meetings are behind held ahead of a report from the International
Atomic Energy Agency director general Mohamed ElBaradei, which McClellan
said the White House expected "will show that the regime remains
in non-compliance with its obligations."
The IAEA has been investigating Iran for more than three years, and
any cut in ties would spell an end to international inspections and
monitoring of nuclear facilities inside the Islamic republic.
Iran denies claims it is seeking to build nuclear weapons and says it
only wants to enrich to make reactor fuel for power plants, although
the process can be extended to make the core of an atomic bomb.
"If you decide to use sanctions against us, our relations with
the agency will be suspended," said the country's national security
chief and top nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani.
"Military action against Iran will not lead to the closure of the
programme," Larijani said. "If you take harsh measures, we
will hide this programme. Then you cannot solve the nuclear issue.
He also refused to rule out using oil as a weapon in the worsening standoff,
warning of "important consequences" for energy supplies if
Iran was subjected to "radical measures".
The fresh barrage of threats came the day after hardline President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad warned that Iran could quit the Non-Proliferation Treaty,
but nonetheless confidently dismissed any threat of sanctions or even
a US attack.
Iran's refusal to comply with the Security Council demand -- as well
as its promise to expand enrichment work to reach an industrial-scale
capacity -- leaves it exposed to the danger of UN sanctions.
The United States has also not ruled out military action.
"The US president does not take any options off the table but we
are on a diplomatic course here, that is the agenda that we are pursuing,"
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said, adding that "the Iranians
can threaten, but they are deepening their own isolation."
But she added on a visit to Athens: "The agenda is to reinforce
our diplomatic effort."
Iran is the world's fourth largest crude producer and the second-biggest
in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and the
tensions have already helped push crude prices to record highs.
"Iran will not start a crisis," Larijani told reporters when
asked if the country would use its vast oil reserves as a weapon in
the dispute. "But if we are subjected to radical measures, that
will automatically have important consequences for oil."
In a meeting with visiting Sudanese President Omar al-Beshir, supreme
leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Iran was ready to transfer its nuclear
technology to other countries, state media reported.
At the United Nations, US ambassador John Bolton said the Security Council
was to consider a draft resolution that would legally require Iran to
comply with demands that it freeze all uranium enrichment activities.
This would use Chapter 7 of the UN Charter, which is invoked in case
of threats to international peace and security, and can open the door
to sanctions or even military action.
France meanwhile confirmed that the Security Council's five permanent
members plus Germany plan to meet in Paris on May 2 to thrash out a
strategy.
China, one of the five, insisted the nuclear issue could still be resolved
through negotiations, and called on all sides to show "flexibility".
Iran's war of words with Israel also worsened, with the Jewish state's
former premier Shimon Peres comparing Ahmadinejad to Adolf Hitler.
"This is the first man since Hitler to stand up and say that the
Jewish people must be exterminated," the Nobel peace prize winner
said as the Jewish state observed a day of remembrance for victims of
the Nazi genocide.
Ahmadinejad, who has dismissed the Holocaust as a "myth",
had on Monday asserted that the "fake" Jewish state "cannot
survive" and called on immigrants to the country to go back to
where they came from.
AFP 04 25 06 1911 GMT
Copyright
© 1999-2006 AFP. All Rights Reserved.
Send
this story to a friend
Your
feedback is important to us!
We invite all our readers to share with us
their views and comments about this article.
Write
to editor@petroleumworld.com
Any
question or suggestions, please write to:
editor@petroleumworld.com

Best
Viewed with IE
5.01+
Windows
NT 4.0, '95, '98 and ME +/ 800x600 pixels
|