Iran
dimisses Israel threats
Iranian
president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has dismissed threats of military
action against Iran's nuclear programme, asserting that his country's
project to enrich uranium is only for peaceful purposes and disputes
that the country worries at all about an Israeli attack to destroy
Iran's nuclear capacity.
25
September, 2012
Speaking
to a group of editorial leaders, the first full day of his visit to
New York for the annual UN General Assembly, Ahmadinejad said it was
not too late for dialogue with the United States to resolve
differences.
He
also said that Iran is neutral in the Syrian civil war, and denied
that Tehran is providing weapons or training to the government of
president Bashar Assad.
"We
like and love both sides, and we see both sides as brothers," he
said.
He
referred to the conflict in Syria as "tribal" fighting and
said that international "meddling from the outside has made the
situation even harder."
He
refused to say whether Iran would accept a government not led by the
Assad regime, which for years has been Iran's closest ally in the
Middle East.
It
was Ahmadinejad's eighth visit to the UN gathering held each
September, which he cited as proof that he is open to understanding
other countries' views.
In
spite of his assertions on the importance of dialogue and respect for
others, Ahmadinejad presented a hard line in many areas.
He
refused to speak of the state of Israel by name and instead referred
only to the "Zionists," and when asked about author Salman
Rushdie he made no attempt to distance himself from recent renewed
threats on the author's life emanating from an Iranian semi-official
religious foundation.
"If
he is in the US, you should not broadcast it for his own safety,"
Ahmadinejad said.
He
said this would be his last trip to New York as president of Iran,
because his term is ending and he is barred from seeking a third
consecutive term.
But
he did not rule out staying active in Iranian politics and said he
might return as part of future Iranian delegations to New York.
"Fundamentally,
we do not take seriously threats of the Zionists," Ahmadinejad
said.
"We believe the
Zionists see themselves at a dead end and they want to find an
adventure to get out of this dead end. While we are fully ready to
defend ourselves, we do not take these threats seriously."
He
also sought to delegitimise Israel's historic ties to the Middle East
and their political and military power in the region and the world,
saying that Israelis "do not even enter the equation for Iran."
On
the other hand, he said the argument over Iran's nuclear programme
was a political rather than a legal matter and needs to be resolved
politically.
"We
are not expecting that a 33-year-old problem between America and Iran
to be resolved in speedy discussions, but we do believe in dialogue."
White
House press secretary Jay Carney responded to Ahmadinejad's remarks,
telling a midday news briefing: "Well, president Ahmadinejad
says foolish, offensive and sometimes unintelligible things with
great regularity. What he should focus on is the failure of his
government of Iran to abide by its international obligations, to
abide by United Nations Security Council resolutions."
Ahmadinejad
later took aim at the United States and Israel while addressing a
high-level UN meeting promoting the rule of law, accusing Washington
of shielding what he called a nuclear-armed "fake regime".
He
also alluded to the amateur anti-Islam video made in the US that has
caused protests across the Muslim world, accusing the United States
and others of misusing freedom of speech and failing to speak out
against the defamation of people's beliefs and "divine
prophets".
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.