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UN Resolution 1737

Iran denies market talk of strike on atomic sites PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 24 June 2008

By Parisa Hafezi

ImageTEHRAN (Reuters) - A senior Iranian nuclear official denied on Tuesday rumours of a strike on the country's nuclear sites that had unsettled financial markets.

"This is just a rumour. No attack against Iran's nuclear facilities has taken place," the official told Reuters, days after a report that Israeli jets had rehearsed a possible strike on the Islamic Republic.

In Jerusalem, an Israeli army spokesman told Reuters on Tuesday: "We are not aware of any such incident in Iran."

The New York Times on Friday quoted U.S. officials as saying Israel had carried out a large military exercise, apparently a rehearsal for a potential bombing of Iran's nuclear facilities.

The report of the Israeli manoeuvres has raised speculation about a possible attack on nuclear sites, which Israel and the United States say Iran is using to master technology so it can build nuclear weapons.

Iran denies the charge and insists its nuclear ambitions have the peaceful aim of generating electricity.

Washington says it wants a diplomatic solution to the nuclear row but has not ruled out military action if that route fails.

In response to Tuesday's rumour, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Fifth Fleet in Bahrain denied there had been any U.S. military strike against Iran.


"SEVERE ANSWER"

Following the market rumour, commander-in-chief of Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards Mohammad Ali Jafari warned the "enemy" over the consequences of any attack on the Islamic state, the official IRNA news agency reported.

"If the enemy makes a strategic mistake (by attacking), the Revolutionary Guards are fully prepared to give a severe answer to the enemy," IRNA quoted Jafari as saying.

Iran's Revolutionary Guards was set up after the 1979 Islamic revolution to protect the clerical ruling system and revolutionary values. It answers to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's top authority.

It has an estimated 125,000-strong military with army, navy and air units. The Corps also is in charge of Iran's most advanced missile systems like the Shahab-3 with a range of 2,000 km (1,250 miles), which analysts say can reach Israel.

European stocks fell sharply and oil firmed on Tuesday on the back of the market talk of an Israeli attack, reflecting nervousness about growing tensions in the Middle East.

Israel bombed an Iraqi reactor in 1981 and an Israeli air raid on Syria last September razed what the United States said was a nascent nuclear reactor built with North Korean help. Syria denied having any such facility.

The chief of the United Nations nuclear watchdog, Mohamed ElBaradei, said on Friday a military strike on Iran would turn the Middle East into a fireball and prompt Tehran to launch a crash course to build nuclear weapons.

Israel, widely believed to have the Middle East's only atomic arsenal, has described Iran's nuclear programme as a threat to its existence.

Earlier this month, Israeli Transport Minister Shaul Mofaz told an Israeli newspaper an attack on Iran looked "unavoidable" given the apparent failure of United Nations sanctions to deny Tehran technology with bomb-making potential.

(Additional reporting by Jerusalem and Manama bureaux)





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In Focus
Iran's nuclear standoff
  • Reuters: U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama said on Monday the world must increase pressure on Iran to rein in its nuclear program and avoid a situation where Israel feels cornered.

  • AP: Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama pledged Monday that he would step up diplomatic pressure to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons before Israel feels that "its back is against the wall" and might take military action.

  • New York Sun: On the heels of a breakdown in talks intended by the West to defuse the Iranian nuclear crisis, Iran is planning to build a new nuclear power facility.

  • AP: Iran's official news agency says the country has begun designing its second light-water nuclear power plant, a 360-megawatt facility in the southwest.

  • AFP: Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Saturday praised the country's government for resisting international pressure on the Islamic republic to halt its controversial nuclear programme.

  • Reuters: Iran described talks with a top U.N. inspector over its nuclear program -- which the West fears is a cover to build atomic bombs -- as "positive", the official IRNA news agency reported on Wednesday.

  • AFP: Iran's Atomic Energy Organisation on Tuesday tasked six local companies to hunt for potential sites for new nuclear power plants, the official news agency IRNA reported.

  • Iran Focus: Tehran, Iran, Aug. 19 – A senior official from the United Nations nuclear watchdog is holding talks with Iranian officials in Tehran.

  • AP: Iran should not give Western nations the justification to "drag the region down a dangerous slope" by its lack of transparency and flexibility in the conflict over its nuclear program, Egypt's presidential spokesman said Saturday.

  • Iran Focus: Tehran, Iran, Aug. 14 - Iran's Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki held telephone conversations on Wednesday with his Chinese, German, and Russian counterparts.

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