relationship
Iran Wants to Resolve Problems
with U.S.
By Ali Akbar Dareini
Associated Press Writer
February 8, 2005
CBN.com
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -- Iran's top nuclear negotiator said
Tuesday that Tehran wanted to resolve decades of differences with
the United States and warned that a U.S. military strike wouldn't
destroy all of Iran's nuclear facilities.
Iran's top leaders have tried in recent days to ease increasing
tensions with Washington amid a war of words. President Bush last
week accused Iran of being "the world's primary state sponsor
of terror."
"We are not seeking tension with the United States,"
negotiator Hasan Rowhani told the state-run television. "We
are seeking to resolve our problems with America but it's the
Americans who don't want problems be resolved."
"There is no problem in today's world that can't be resolved,"
said Rowhani, who is secretary of Iran's powerful Supreme National
Security Council.
Washington believes Iran is secretly using its civilian nuclear
program to build a nuclear bomb. Iran denies the allegation, saying
its nuclear activities are geared solely toward generating electricity.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on Friday said that a military
strike against Iran was "simply not on the agenda at this
point," but Bush has not ruled out a military strike as an
option.
But Rowhani said that a U.S. military strike against Iran's nuclear
facilities would fail.
"Iran's nuclear technology is in the hands of its scientists
and workshops throughout the country. All of them have the ability
to produce centrifuges. Therefore, America will not be able to
destroy our nuclear facilities and mines through a military strike,"
he said.
Israel has warned that it may consider a pre-emptive strike
against Iranian nuclear installations along the lines of its 1981
bombing of an unfinished Iraqi nuclear reactor at Osirak near
Baghdad but Iranian officials have said any possible attack would
fail.
Iran's nuclear facilities are spread throughout the country and
partly built under the ground making an aerial attack a possible
failure.
The broadcast said Iran began a new round of nuclear talks with
the Europeans in Geneva on Monday.
Iran this week called on the Europeans to speed up the talks,
reflecting frustration over lack of progress over European insistence
that Tehran turn its temporary suspension of nuclear activities
into a permanent stop.
Iran suspended uranium enrichment and all related activities
in November, hoping to build trust and avoid U.N. Security Council
sanctions. The International Atomic Energy Agency has agreed to
police the suspension.
Under an agreement reached with the European Union, Iran will
continue suspension of its enrichment activities during negotiations
with the Europeans about economic, political and technological
aid. Iran has said it will decide within three months whether
to continue its suspension, which is monitored by U.N. nuclear
inspectors.
Rowhani said Iran will never scrap its nuclear program and won't
give up its rights under the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty which
allows Iran access to peaceful nuclear technology.
"Talks can't continue for a long time. The Europeans have
been told that the period of negotiations has to be within months
not years," he told the television.
"And the condition to continue the talks is progress. Therefore,
if by the end of the (Iranian calendar) year (March 20), there
is no progress in the talks, we will not be obliged to continue
the talks," Rowhani said.
He also insisted that Iran now possesses the technology to control
the whole nuclear fuel cycle - from extracting uranium ore to
enriching it.
"We have the ability to extract uranium, process it into
yellowcake and enrich it and produce fuel. We can claim that we
control the nuclear fuel cycle," he said.
© 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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