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Iran
launches missile tests amid fresh nuclear defiance

By
Farhad Pouladi
AFP
TEHRAN
Petroleumworld.com 01 23 06
Iran launched a series of war games on Monday and vowed to block UN
nuclear inspectors from entering the country in a fresh show of defiance
over its controversial nuclear aims.
EU foreign ministers in Brussels, meanwhile, deplored Tehran's lack
of cooperation over its nuclear programme and vowed to fully implement
UN sanctions, including asset freezes, trade stoppages and travel bans.
Short-range missiles were to be tested in the four-day exercise southeast
of Tehran, which came as the US military was sending a second warship
to Gulf waters amid growing international tension over Iran's atomic
programme.
"Ground forces of Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards are completely
ready to tackle any kind of foreign threats," said artillery commander
Majid Ayeneh.
Among missiles to be tested were the Fajr 5, which military sources
have reported has a range of around 75 kilometres (45 miles), and the
Zelzal which is said to have a range of between 100 to 400 kilometres
(60 to 250 miles).
The missile tests were announced just days after Iran's top nuclear
negotiator Ali Larijani said the armed forces were ready to face any
threat to its nuclear installations amid speculation Washington may
be planning a military strike.
US Under Secretary of State Nicholas Burns said Sunday: "We leave
all options on the table, but we are seeking a diplomatic solution to
these problems."
Washington announced this month it was stepping up US military presence
in the region by sending a second aircraft carrier to join one already
in the Gulf, the first such buildup since the launch of the US-led war
on Iraq in 2003.
In addition to ordering the deployment of the aircraft carrier USS John
C. Stennis, the Pentagon announced that an air defence battalion equipped
with Patriot missile defence systems would also go to the region.
Burns said mounting international pressure, including UN sanctions,
has put the Islamic republic on the defensive, and pledged that Iran
would face a second round of sanctions if it does not suspend nuclear
activity in its main nuclear research centre in Natanz by February 21.
But Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki told reporters on Monday
that Tehran was "continuing building centrifuges (for uranium enrichment)
and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) knows about it".
The UN Security Council passed Resolution 1737 in December, imposing
sanctions on Iran because it has repeatedly refused to fully cooperate
with the UN nuclear watchdog or suspend uranium enrichment.
In reprisal for the resolution, the head of parliament's national security
commission, Alaeddin Borujerdi, announced Iran was blocking from the
country 38 inspectors from the IAEA.
"This is the first step in implementing the parliament legislation"
on limiting cooperation with the IAEA, Borujerdi told the ISNA news
agency.
"The committee (in charge of implementing the parliamentary legislation)
decided not to allow 38 inspectors to enter Iran and this restriction
has been officially announced to the IAEA," he said.
IAEA inspectors regularly visit Iranian nuclear sites under the nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty, to which Iran is a signatory.
Mottaki defended the move as "completely legal" and said that
"IAEA member states have the right to oppose the trip of any inspector
they wish".
Iran, OPEC's second largest oil exporter, insists its nuclear programme
is solely aimed at meeting peaceful energy needs. However, the West
fears that it could be diverted towards building a bomb.
Following talks in Brussels, EU foreign ministers made a political declaration
that paves the way for EU legal experts to draw up the necessary legislation
for the UN resolution to be implemented.
The foreign ministers "deplored Iran's failure to take the steps
repeatedly required by the IAEA board of governors and the United Nations
Security Council".
They agreed to halt trade in nuclear-related goods with the Islamic
republic, freeze the assets of those linked to the programme and impose
targeted travel bans.
But Iran has remained defiant on sanctions with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
saying on Sunday: "Even if they adopt 10 other resolutions it will
not have any effect."
AFP
22 1631 GMT 01 07
Copyright© 1999 AFP. All
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