Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said yesterday that Iran would
resist pressure from the UN Security Council over its nuclear program, vowing
that no power could alienate Tehran from its right to peaceful nuclear
technology.
Ahmadinejad made the remarks to a crowd of thousands of people in the
northeastern city of Gorgan in a speech broadcast live on state television.
Iran would not abandon its drive to produce nuclear fuel by "the harsh
statements and pressures by the U.S. and its allies", Ahmadinejad told the
gathering.
The West "should be assured that through propaganda, political pressures and
games they play nowadays such as issuing statements, making angry
gestures...can't deny the Iranian nation from pursuing its path," he stressed.
The Iranian president also struck a defiant tone on the threat of political
sanctions against Tehran.
The Western leaders say "we will not let Ahmadinejad travel to some Western
countries if the Iranian people do not stop their path of seeking peaceful
nuclear technology" and "I tell them I do not even want to set eyes on their
faces," said Ahmadinejad. Meanwhile, Iran announced on Tuesday that it has
resumed talks with Russia on Monday in Moscow over a Russia-proposed compromise
plan to defuse the standoff over Iran's nuclear program.
An Iranian delegation, headed by Seyed Ali Hosseini-Tash, Deputy Secretary of
Iran's Supreme National Security Council (SNSC), has been talking with Russian
officials in Moscow since Monday, said SNSC spokesman Hossein Entezami, quoted
by the official IRNA news agency.
Later on Tuesday, five permanent members of the UN Security Council are set
to discuss the Iranian nuclear file, which has the power to slap sanctions on
Iran if Tehran doesn't back down in its confrontation over its nuclear
ambitions.
Iran had conditioned an acceptance of the offer on a permit of Iran's uranium
enrichment on a small scale at home. However, the United States and the European
Union, who had expressed readiness to accept the Russian plan, insisted that
Iran could not be allowed to do any enrichment work.
Due to Iran's rejection of returning to a moratorium on its
enrichment-related activities, the International Atomic Energy Agency on
Wednesday handed over its chief Mohamed ElBaradei's report on the Iranian
nuclear issue to the U.N. Security Council soon after the agency's board of
governors concluded a seasonal meeting.
Iran has denounced the involvement of the Security Council, vowing never to
give in to pressures and bullies.