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Iran Might Use Oil In Response To UN Sanctions: Report

Iram's radical president Mahmood Ahmadinejad would welcome the opportunity to turn off the oil to the west, if sanctions go too far.

Dubai (AFP) Oct 01, 2005
Iran's president was quoted Saturday as saying Tehran could use oil as a weapon if the UN Security Council imposes sanctions over suspicions Tehran is seeking weapons of mass destruction, but the report was denied by his spokesman.

"If Iran's case is sent to the Security Council, we will respond in many ways, for example by holding back on oil sales or limiting inspections of our nuclear facilities," Ahmadinejad was quoted as saying by the English-language daily Khaleej Times.

Ahmadinejad was also quoted as saying Iran might deny access to international nuclear inspectors if the Security Council is pressured by Washington and its allies to apply sanctions.

Ahmadinejad reiterated Iran's position that Tehran has the right to pursue peaceful uses of nuclear energy but said there was no question of using that technology to make weapons, as Iran is governed by Islamic principles which prohibit production or use of nuclear weapons.

"Our religion prohibits us from having nuclear arms and our religious leader has prohibited it from the point of view of religious law," he said.

The newspaper said the Iranian president made his remarks in answer to a question on what his response would be if the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) turned Iran's case over to the Security Council, possibly leading to sanctions.

But his spokesman told AFP in Tehran that "President Ahmadinejad did not give an interview to the Emirati newspaper Khaleej Times, and there is no truth to the information published by this newspaper."

Khaleej Times editor Prem Chandran told AFP that the freelance journalist who wrote the article, Nihal Kamel, "expressed surprise at the denial."

She said "the confusion must have occurred because on several occasions she met/got in touch with him, (but) she presented herself as a reporter with an American-based publication, not as a Khaleej Times reporter, though she has given this report exclusively to Khaleej Times."

Asked about reported threats by some Iranian officials of triggering a rise in oil prices and pulling out of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), Ahmadinejad said that "any smart human being should use every resource in order to achieve his independence," according to Khaleej Times.

"I doubt that the leaders of the US and Europe are that far removed from reality. They are smarter than denying us this legal right. It's natural they will use whatever they have, which is the UN Security Council, but our nation has the means to defend its rights," he said.

Iran insists its nuclear program is peaceful. But the United States and European Union want Iran to abandon all work related to uranium enrichment, arguing Iran cannot be trusted with such sensitive technology, but also offering incentives in return.

The IAEA last week adopted a resolution that finds Iran in "non-compliance" with nuclear proliferation safeguards -- an automatic trigger for taking the matter to the Security Council.

Iran has already threatened to respond to the resolution by ending compliance with the NPT's additional protocol -- which gives the IAEA more inspection powers -- and resuming enrichment.

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India, Pakistan To Sign Military Trust-Boosting Deals: Reports
New Delhi (AFP) Oct 01, 2005
Nuclear rivals India and Pakistan will next week sign accords to improve trust between their militaries including one giving advance warning of ballistic missile tests, newspaper reports said Saturday.







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