WORLD / Middle East
Khamenei: Iran would retaliate if attacked
(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-03-22 07:25
Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, delivers a speech in a
public gathering at the city of Mashhad, 540 miles (900 kilometers)
northeast of the capital Tehran, Iran, Wednesday, March 21, 2007. Iran's
supreme leader said Wednesday that Tehran will pursue nuclear activities
outside international regulations if the U.N. Security Council insists it
stop Uranium enrichment. [AP]
TEHRAN - Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei warned on Wednesday Iran
would hit back if attacked over its nuclear program, which the United
States believes is aimed at making atom bombs.
Khamenei, who has previously threatened U.S. regional interests if
attacked, was addressing a big crowd of pilgrims at Iran's holiest shrine
in the northeastern city of Mashhad to mark the Iranian new year, which
falls on March 21.
"If they want to threaten us and use force and violence against us, they
should not doubt that Iranian officials will use all they have in their
power to deal a blow to those who assault them," he said in the speech
aired on television.
The U.N. Security Council is this week considering new sanctions against
Iran over its refusal to suspend its uranium enrichment program, whose
product can be used to make fuel for power generation or, when more
highly enriched, nuclear weapons.
But Khamenei's speech, and a defiant New Year address by President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad earlier on Wednesday, showed no intention by Iran of
bowing to foreign pressure.
The world's fourth-largest oil exporter insists the program is peaceful
and aimed only at generating electricity.
Khamenei said Iran's nuclear work followed international rules, but if
major powers via the Security Council took "illegal actions" and ignored
Iran's rights, "we can also carry out illegal actions and we will do
that."
Washington has said it would prefer a diplomatic solution to the
stand-off, but has not ruled out military options, though Britain's
Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett said world powers were not preparing
for a strike against Tehran.
"No one is preparing for military action," she told reporters in the
United Arab Emirates capital Abu Dhabi after talks with officials of the
Gulf Arab ally.
"The purpose of sanctions, the purpose of pushing further pressure on
Iran is to get them to negotiations," Beckett said. "We all very much
hope that they will."
The UAE and fellow U.S.-allied Gulf Arab neighbors of Iran have expressed
concern over its nuclear program and raised fears of a regional nuclear
race they announced plans to acquire nuclear energy capability in
December.
Khamenei said Iran is ready to sign a joint defense treaty with Gulf
countries, state television said, without elaborating.
PSYCHOLOGY
In his address earlier on Wednesday, Ahmadinejad accused some big powers
of waging psychological warfare against Iran.
"By psychological warfare, propaganda and misuse of the organizations
they have themselves created ... they are trying to prevent our nation's
development," Ahmadinejad said.
He has previously accused the United States and Britain of using the
Security Council as a tool against Iran.
The proposed U.N. resolution would embargo Iranian arms exports and
freeze financial assets abroad of 28 individuals, groups and companies.
It is a follow-up to a previous resolution adopted by the Council in
December and was expected to be voted on this week after Germany and
permanent council members Britain, China, France, Russia and the United
States agreed on the text.
But South Africa, the council's current chair, has called for all the
main proposed sanctions to be dropped. The council could probably adopt
the measure without South African backing, but the major powers had
wanted it passed unanimously.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said amendments proposed by South
Africa and Indonesia deserved "attentive consideration."
He also said Russia, which has commercial and political ties to Tehran,
would not back "excessive sanctions" against Iran.
Russian officials say they share Western concerns about a nuclear-armed
Iran but argue a policy of constructive engagement can prevent this more
effectively than one that corners Tehran.
Earlier this week Russia denied a newspaper report that it had threatened
to halt work on building Iran's Bushehr nuclear power station unless
Tehran stopped uranium enrichment.
At U.N. headquarters in New York, negotiators said Qatar had also
submitted amendments to the draft, but that they and those proposed by
Indonesia were general and could be accommodated.
"More challenging for the permanent five is the South African amendments,
much more challenging," China's deputy U.N. ambassador Liu Zhenmin told
reporters.
He said negotiators were aiming at a vote this week "but it seems that
this week is not possible."
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