Vereinigung der Iranischen(Konstitutionalisten) Monarchisten
www.setad.org 0043(0)69918448501
Anarom ( Mi.) 30.Farwardin 2565 ,19April 2006

Sky TV's Adam Boulton interviewed Reza Pahlavi
Islamic Republic Vows No Retreat On Nuclear Issues
Iran will not retreat one iota on its uranium enrichment, President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad said Thursday, signaling there would be no concessions in talks with
the head of the U.N. nuclear agency who arrived to head off a confrontation with
the Security Council.
"We have not seen diversion of nuclear material for weapons purposes, but the
picture is still hazy and not very clear," the U.N. nuclear chief, Mohamed
ElBaradei, told reporters after talks with Iran's nuclear officials.
ElBaradei said he had discussed with the Iranians the U.N. request for Iran to
suspend uranium enrichment for a period of time until questions over its nuclear
program had been resolved.
Iran's chief nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani, told the same press conference
that such moves were not acceptable. "Such proposals are not very important
ones," he said.
Hours earlier, Ahmadinejad had said enrichment was an Iranian red line in the
talks with the United Nations.
"We won't hold talks with anyone about the right of the Iranian nation (to
enrich uranium) and no one has the right to retreat, even one iota," Ahmadinejad
was quoted as saying Thursday by the official Islamic Republic News Agency.
Ahmadinejad is playing to the home audience, says Reza Pahlavi, son of the
deposed Shah of Iran.
"The regime is desperate in terms of internal pressure. It needs to divert ...
people's attention away from their daily problems and on something else,"
Pahlavi said. "This regime is not trying to avoid confrontation, on the
contrary, it needs confrontation in order to survive."
Enriched uranium is used for fuel in power-generating reactors and warheads of
nuclear weapons. But Western diplomats and experts familiar with Iran's program
say Iran still is far from producing any weapons-grade uranium.
"Our answer to those who are angry about Iran achieving the full nuclear fuel
cycle is just one phrase. We say: 'Be angry at us and die of this anger,'"
Ahmadinejad said.
The Security Council has given Iran until April 28 to cease enrichment of
uranium. But Iran has rejected the demand and announced Tuesday that, for the
first time, it had enriched uranium with 164 centrifuges — a step toward
large-scale production.
Representatives of the "big five" on the Security Council discussed Iran's
latest development on Thursday morning.
"We want to see what the outcome of the discussions between ElBaradei and the
Iranian government is, and when we get information on that, we'll consider what
to do next," U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, John Bolton, said after the
meeting.
China said Thursday it was sending its assistant foreign minister to Tehran to
convey its concerns about Iran's nuclear program.
On Tuesday, reports CBS News correspondent Sheila MacVicar, jubilant Iranian
scientists paraded what they said was evidence they had crossed a major
technical hurdle, enriching uranium to a level suitable for power production.
"The regime's announcement the other day is only another signal of their
defiance of the international community and it only further isolates the regime
from the rest of the world," said White House spokesman Scott McClellan on
Thursday.
Iran's deputy nuclear chief, Mohammad Saeedi, said Wednesday that Iran intends
to move toward large-scale uranium enrichment involving 3,000 centrifuges by
late 2006, and then expand the program to 54,000 centrifuges.
Saeedi said the 54,000 centrifuges would produce enough enriched uranium to fuel
a 1,000-megawatt reactor, such as the one Iran has built with Russian assistance
at Bushehr. The reactor is due to come on stream later this year.
Iran's nuclear chief, Gholamreza Aghazadeh, said Wednesday that Iran is prepared
to give the West a share of Iran's enrichment facilities to allay fears that the
country may divert some product to build weapons.
"The best way to get out of this issue is for countries that have concern to
become our partners in Natanz in management, production and technology," he
said, referring to the site of Iran's enrichment plant.
"This is a very important confidence-building measure," he said.