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IAEA chief warns of "crazies" seeking Iran war
By Reuters
06/01/07 - -- LONDON, June 1 (Reuters) - The United Nations
nuclear watchdog chief warned on Friday against the "new
crazies" advocating military action to halt Iran's nuclear programme and said he did not want to see another war like that
in Iraq.
"I wake every morning and see 100 Iraqis, innocent civilians,
are dying," International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) director
Mohamed ElBaradei said in an interview for BBC Radio.
"I have no brief other than to make sure we don't go into
another war or that we go crazy into killing each other. You do
not want to give additional argument to new crazies who say
'let's go and bomb Iran'," he said in a documentary, excerpts
from which were published on the BBC's Web site in advance.
Tehran has ignored repeated warnings and resolutions sponsored
by world powers in the United Nations Security Council demanding
that it cease uranium enrichment.
It was ElBaradei's strongest warning yet against the use of
force. He has urged Western powers to consider allowing Iran
limited enrichment he believes would pose no bomb proliferation
risk and avert a feared slide into conflict.
The powers have rejected his proposal.
Iran says it is pursuing a nuclear programme to provide
electricity. The West believes it is trying to build a nuclear
bomb and is gearing up to draft a third round of U.N. sanctions
against the Islamic Republic.
Enrichment is a process of refining uranium for power plants, or
if taken to a very high degree, atom bombs. A report by
ElBaradei's IAEA last week said Iran was expanding a campaign to
install 3,000 enrichment centrifuges by mid-summer, laying a
basis for "industrial-scale" fuel production.
In the BBC interview ElBaradei said a nuclear-armed Iran would
be terrible but added the jury was still out as to whether the
country even wanted atomic weapons.
He said one could not "bomb knowledge". Asked who the "new
crazies" were he replied: "Those who have extreme views and say
the only solution is to impose your will by force."
ElBaradei angered the United States, Britain and France by
calling for a face-saving compromise that would cap Iranian
enrichment activity at its current modest levels.
Diplomats said those three countries, as well as Japan, sent
envoys to stress to ElBaradei that the U. N. Security Council
resolution urging an immediate halt to Iran's nuclear activities
was law, adopted unanimously, and should enjoy his support.
In Germany earlier this week, U.S. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice indirectly chided ElBaradei by saying "the IAEA
is not an agency that is negotiating with the Iranians. That is
being done under a Security Council resolution by six states".
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