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Tehran hints at using oil weapon in
nuclear row
Foreign Desk Report
TEHRAN—Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, supreme
leader of the world’s fourth largest oil
exporter, said on Sunday that if the
United States makes a “wrong move” toward
Iran, energy flows in the region would be
endangered.
Iranian officials have in the past ruled
out using oil as a weapon in Iran’s
nuclear standoff with the West, but
Khamenei’s comments suggested Iran could
disrupt supplies if pushed. His remarks,
which are likely to unsettle wary oil
markets, come days before EU foreign
policy chief Javier Solana is due to
deliver a package of incentives agreed by
six world powers and designed to persuade
Iran to abandon plans to make nuclear
fuel.
“If you (the United States) make a wrong
move regarding Iran, definitely the energy
flow in this region will be seriously
endangered,” Khamenei, who has the last
word in all matters of state, said in a
speech which discussed the dispute.
Washington accuses Tehran of seeking to
develop atomic weapons under cover of a
civilian nuclear power program, a charge
Tehran denies.
The United States says it wants a
diplomatic solution but has refused to
rule out military action. Washington has
offered to join European countries in
talks with Iran about the nuclear program,
but says Iran must first suspend uranium
enrichment. Iran has so far rejected the
demand, saying enrichment is a national
right. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said
on Saturday Iran would consider the
proposals from the United States, Russia,
China, France, Germany and Britain but
also insisted that the crux of the package
was unacceptable.
The incentives being offered have not been
publicly announced, but diplomats have
been working on themes ranging from
offering nuclear reactors to giving
security guarantees. A date for Solana’s
visit to Iran to deliver the package has
yet to be announced. Iranian officials
said the visit was expected in the next
few days.
Khamenei did not explicitly refer to
enrichment in his speech that marked the
anniversary of the death of Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the
Islamic Republic. But he said: “We are
committed to our national interests and
whoever threatens it will experience the
sharpness of this nation’s anger.” He also
praised the efforts of the country’s
nuclear scientists in developing
home-grown nuclear technology as a “brave
move” and dismissed what he said was the
West’s campaign against the country’s
atomic program.
“Today our nation has taken a step forward
and has bravely resisted,” he said. “There
is no international consensus against
Iran’s nuclear program except by some ...
monopolist countries and this consensus
has no value.” Khamenei spoke from a
podium emblazoned with Khomeini’s words
“America cannot do a damn thing.” His
speech listed what he said were U.S.
failures in Iraq, Afghanistan, the
Palestinian territories and elsewhere in
the area.
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