Iran rejects US 'pressure' on nuclear issue
By Simon Tisdall, Ewen MacAskill, Robert Tait in Tehran
06/22/06 "The
Guardian" -- -- The US is determined to topple
Iran's Islamic government whether or not the crisis over the
country's nuclear activities is resolved, Iran's chief nuclear
negotiator, Ali Larijani, said today.
US enmity towards Iran was entrenched, Mr Larijani told the
Guardian. "The nuclear issue is just a pretext. If it was not
the nuclear matter, they would have come up with something
else."
The compromise package offered by the west on Iran's nuclear
activities amounted to a "sermon", he said, rejecting outright
President George Bush's demands this week that Iran suspend all
uranium enrichment.
"If they want to put this prerequisite, why are we negotiating
at all? Mr Bush is like a mathematician. When the equation
becomes very difficult to work out, he likes to wipe it out
altogether ... the pressure they are putting on us is reason
enough for us to be suspicious."
Mr Larijani's remarks represented his most negative assessment
since the west's package was presented on June 6, suggesting a
quick resolution was unlikely. Diplomats say Iran has been given
a de facto deadline of the G8 summit in St Petersburg in
mid-July for a formal response.
But Mr Larijani said Iran would present extensive and detailed
counter-proposals only when it was ready to do so, although
committees of experts were "working round the clock". A debate
is underway inside the government with hardline ayatollahs
calling for outright rejection of the west's ideas and some
officials stressing their positive aspects.
Mr Larijani, former deputy head of Iran's Revolutionary Guards,
is the most influential political figure in the country after
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and answers directly to the
Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei. As chairman of the Supreme
National Security Council, he oversees security and defence
strategy.
Mr Larijani said American policies in the Middle East, from Iraq
to Palestine, were deeply destabilising and had complicated
efforts to cut a deal. "If they continue on the same path, the
price of oil will skyrocket and it will strengthen our resolve.
They want to set fire to the region. The American strategy is to
use force to secure their interests."
He also blamed Israel for many of the region's problems. "I
think those people advising the CIA are the Zionists. They are
pushing [the Americans] into this quagmire of war."
He denied reports that Iran was planning to block oil export
routes through the Strait of Hormuz, at the mouth of the Gulf,
if it was attacked or if UN sanctions were imposed. But he
warned that if hostile action was taken through the UN security
council, Iran would "reconsider its relationship" with the
International Atomic Energy Agency. That could spell an end to
already limited UN inspections of the nuclear plants at Natanz
and Isfahan.
Mr Larijani said he was in constant contact by telephone with
the EU's foreign policy chief, Javier Solana, contrasting Iran's
dialogue with the Europeans with a lack of contact with the Bush
administration.
But he offered to talk to the White House if US policies
changed. "We should put aside the [US] sanctions and give up all
this talk about regime change. This is what we are looking for
... if the Americans change their behaviour in the region and
change their strategy, I assure you that talking over the phone
will not be a serious problem."
He was critical of US attempts to promote democracy inside Iran.
"They said they wanted to turn Iraq into a beacon of democracy.
And out of that whole venture came Abu Ghraib and atrocities
that were committed there on a daily basis ... the Palestinians
chose a Hamas government. Why are they so hostile towards them?"
The $70m earmarked by the Bush administration to aid propaganda
efforts inside Iran was an insult, he said. "I think that money
is very little, to be honest," he said with a wry smile. "The
minimum acceptable amount should be $70bn so the citizens of
this country would at least get something out of it."
Mr Larijani declined to discuss the specifics of Iran's coming
counter-proposals. "But suffice it to say [the west's package]
has a lot of ambiguous points. These ambiguities persist from
the beginning to the end of the package. On many of the points,
we do not know how they intend to go about them. The package is
more like a statement. If we are going to get agreement, we do
not need a sermon."
Mr Larijani said there was no doubt that security guarantees
were badly needed as part of any deal - "but not what they have
talked about. They should not try to repackage their needs as
incentives and offer that to us as a concession".
But he reiterated Iran's insistence that, despite western
suspicions to the contrary, it has no wish to acquire a nuclear
weapons capability. "We are not trying to construct the bomb. We
don't want the bomb. The Americans know this. And Mr [John]
Negroponte [the US intelligence tsar] announced some time ago
that that Iranians don't have the bomb and wouldn't be able to
make the bomb, even if they wanted to, for more than 10 years."
He strongly objected to the west's perceived double standards in
objecting to limited nuclear-related "research and development"
by Iran while acquiescing in Israel's and India's nuclear
weapons programmes.
© Guardian Newspapers Limited 2006
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