In view of all the propaganda coming out about an imminent collapse of the Iranian economy we should hear the other side.
Iran
fighting economic, psychological war against West: Ahmadinejad
Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has dismissed rumors of economic
downturn in the Islamic Republic, saying the country is facing a
tough economic and psychological war waged by the West.
2
October, 2012
“A
clandestine, vast and heavy war has been waged [against Iran] on the
global scale … and our colleagues in the Central Bank [of Iran] and
other relevant bodies are working hard to find solutions … and this
is a [real] battle,” Ahmadinejad told a press conference attended
by domestic and foreign reporters in Tehran on Tuesday.
Pointing
to the fluctuations in the currency markets in Iran, the president
said, “Fluctuations [in the Iranian foreign exchange market] have
not begun today. The market has been fluctuating for some time and
these fluctuations have only gathered steam recently,” he said.
Ahmadinejad
stated that the enemies have imposed embargos on Iran’s crude oil
exports and banking transactions to make it difficult for the Islamic
Republic to sell oil, as the country’s most important revenues
source, or transfer the proceeds once oil is sold.
The
Iranian chief executive emphasized that Iran would soon make up for a
short decline caused by enemies in its oil exports.
“Keep
in mind that it’s a battle. The enemy imagines that it can shatter
the [will of] Iranian nation by [applying] such pressures and they
may even make new decisions.”
He
noted that the Iranian nation would overcome these pressures although
the enemy continues to ratchet up the pressure.
“The
pressures are not exerted on the governments alone, but are [exerted]
on the nations too. All these [measures] constitute a psychological
warfare and of course certain decisions have been taken. Of course,
our people are calm. The enemy has thrown a stone at us, we have to
lift it and throw it back at them.”
Ahmadinejad
also played down the threats of military strike against the Islamic
Republic, adding that such threats mostly represent a war of nerves
rather than real intention to attack.
“The
Zionist regime [of Israel] is after adventurism in a bid to win a
chance. It wrongly imagines that it can acquire that chance by
threatening Iran, but they are mistaken. Their time is over and they
have to go away,” the Iranian chief executive said.
Ahmadinejad
also pointed to relations between Iran and the US, saying that any
talks between Tehran and Washington must be based on equal terms and
mutual respect and the US must first correct its behavior toward
Iran.
Iran
to produce highly-enriched uranium if talks fail
Should
nuclear talks between Tehran and six world powers fail, Iran will
produce highly enriched uranium to fuel its ships, an Iranian MP
warned.
RT,
2
October, 2012
The
comments by the deputy chairman of the Majlis National Security and
Foreign Policy Committee, Mansour Haqiqatpour, come after Israel’s
warning last week that by mid-2013 Iran will be on the brink of
developing a nuclear weapon.
“If
the talks between Iran and the 5+1 group (the five permanent members
of the UN Security Council and Germany) do not yield results, the
Iranian youth will (produce) up to 60 percent enriched uranium to
fuel submarines and oceangoing ships,”
MP Mansour Haqiqatpour told ISNA news agency.
Iran
denies allegations that it is seeking to develop a nuclear weapon,
insisting that it nuclear program is for peaceful means.
In
order to fuel ships with nuclear energy, Iran needs to produce
uranium enriched to a purity level of higher than 20 percent, Tehran
Times reports.
Experts
warn that if Iran produces enough uranium, purified to such a level,
that it could quickly be enriched further and be used to produce a
bomb.
Iran
has already produced more than 6.8 tonnes of uranium refined up to 5
per cent since 2007. According to the latest IAEA report, 190 kg of
uranium has been refined to 20 per cent.
Despite
the war of words between Iran and Israel, many analysts believe that
it will take several years for Iran to develop a nuclear weapon
should it decide to do so.
"I
still think that we are talking about several years … before Iran
could develop a nuclear weapon and certainly before they could have a
deliverable nuclear weapon,"
said Shannon Kile, head of the Nuclear Weapons Project of the
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, as cited by
Reuters.
Speaking
to the UN General Assembly last week Israeli PM Benjamin
Netanyahu drew a ‘red line’ on
a cartoon bomb representing Tehran’s alleged ambition to create a
nuclear weapon. The drawing was divided into three sections, with
marks indicating 70 percent and 90 percent of the uranium enrichment
required to build an atomic bomb.
“Iran
is 70 percent of the way there, and are well into the second stage.
By next summer, at current enrichment rates, they will have finished
the medium enrichment and move on to the final stage. From there it
is only a few more weeks before they have enriched enough for a
bomb,”
he said.
In
response to Netanyahu’s statement, Iran's Defense Minister urged
the international community to put pressure on Israel for crossing
the "red line" by stockpiling nuclear warheads and mass
destruction weapons.
"If
possessing a nuclear bomb is crossing the redline, the Zionist regime
with tens of nuclear warheads and a variety of mass destruction
weapons has crossed the red line for many years and it should be
confronted,"
Brigadier General Ahmad Vahidi said on Saturday, ISNA reported.


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