Iran
'number one world power': Ahmadinejad
Reuters
Iran's
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
TEHRAN
Petroleumworld.com Feb. 29 2008
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad declared on Thursday
that Iran was the world's "number one" power, as he launched a bitter
new assault on domestic critics he accused of siding with the enemy.
"Everybody has understood that Iran is the number one power in the world," Ahmadinejad
said in a speech to families who lost loved ones in the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war.
"Today the name of Iran means a firm punch in the teeth of the powerful
and it puts them in their place," added Ahmadinejad, who on Sunday will
become the first president of the Islamic republic to visit neighbouring Iraq.
Ahmadinejad's comments come amid renewed Western efforts on the UN Security Council
to agree a third package of sanctions against Tehran over its refusal to suspend
sensitive nuclear activities.
They also came a day after former top nuclear negotiator Hassan Rowhani launched
an unprecedented attack on Ahmadinejad's foreign policy, accusing him of using "coarse
slogans and grandstanding".
"You can see how some people here... try to materialise the plans of the
enemies and by showing that Iran is small and the enemy is big," seethed
Ahmadinejad.
"These are the people who put the enemies of humanity in the place of God," said
the deeply religious president.
Ahmadinejad once again insisted that Iran was winning the standoff over its atomic
programme, which the West fears could be used to make nuclear weapons but Iran
says is peaceful.
"The Iranian nation is on the verge of the final nuclear victory and no
power can stop this nation."
"The enemies of the nation and bullying powers do not dare to admit that
this nation has won in the nuclear field."
Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who this week congratulated Ahmadinejad
for his role in Iran's nuclear case, said that Islamic countries do not need
US approval to achieve great works.
Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki meanwhile sent a letter to UN Secretary
General Ban Ki-moon criticising what he described as "baseless accusations" by
UN Security Council members about the Iranian nuclear drive, the official IRNA
news agency reported.
Rowhani's speech on Wednesday was extraordinary for its explicit criticism of
the president's policies and for its attack on his inflammatory anti-Israel rhetoric,
which has once again provoked Western condemnation.
While Ahmadinejad did not mention Rowhani by name, his address is likely to be
seen as a clear message to his opponents that such criticism of his rhetoric
is not welcome.
Ahmadinejad also told the families of the "martyrs" of the war that
their loss was not in vain as the message of the Islamic revolution of 1979
that ousted the pro-US shah was spreading all over the world.
" Today the message of your revolution is being heard in South America, East
Asia, in the heart of Europe and even in the United States itself," he
said.
Ahmadinejad said he talked with people everywhere he travelled in the world
and "it
is like I am in district 17 in Tehran", referring to the low-income area
in the south of the Iranian capital where he was giving his speech.
" I have been to most parts of the world. I read the news every day. Every
day I speak to different figures from different countries and have meetings with
them," he commented.
Suart
Williams from
AFP
AFP
28 1222 GMT 02 08
Copyright© 2007 Petroleumworld ™.
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