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Days after announcing that Iran had
successfully enriched uranium, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on
Friday called Israel a "rotten, dried tree" that will be annihilated by
"one storm."
Opening of at the opening ceremony of the Qods (Jerusalem) conference in
Tehran on supporting the Palestinians, Ahmadinejad fired a series of
verbal shots at Israel, saying it was a "permanent threat" to the Middle
East that will "soon" be liberated, and again questioning the validity
of the Nazi Holocaust against Jews in World War II.
"Like it or not, the Zionist regime is heading toward annihiliation,"
Ahmadinejad said. "The Zionist regime is a rotten, dried tree that will
be eliminated by one storm," he said.
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"The existence of the Zionist
regime is tantamount to an imposition of an unending and unrestrained
threat so that none of the nations and Islamic countries of the region
and beyond can feel secure from its threat," Ahmadinejad said.
The president provoked a world outcry last October when he said Israel
should be "wiped off the map." On Friday, he repeated his previous line
on the Holocaust, saying: "If such a disaster is true, why should the
people of this region pay the price? Why does the Palestinian nation
have to be suppressed and have its land occupied?"
"There might be doubts in the Holocaust, but there are definitely no
doubts about the holocaust happening in the recent years in Palestine,"
Ahmadinejad said.
The land of Palestine, he said, referring to the British mandated
territory that includes all of Israel, Gaza and the West Bank, "will be
freed soon."
He did not say how this would be achieved, but insisted to the audience
of at least 900 people: "Believe that Palestine will be freed soon."
In February, Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki had said Ahmadinejad's
October 2005 comments had been misunderstood and that he had been
speaking about the Israeli "regime," not the country. Mottaki had said a
country could not be removed from the map.
The president spoke days after two Israeli generals spoke of the
military potential of Iran's nuclear program. (For more on Iran, read
the
Iran Time Saver on Rosner's Domain)
The chief of Israeli military intelligence, Major General Amos Yadlin,
was quoted Wednesday as saying Iran could develop a nuclear bomb "within
three years, by the end of the decade."
The day before Ahmadinejad had announced that Iran had successfully
enriched uranium using a battery of 164 centrifuges, a significant step
toward the large-scale production of enriched uranium required for
either fueling nuclear reactors or making nuclear bombs.
The United States, France and Israel accuse Iran of using a civilian
nuclear program to secretly build an atomic bomb. Iran denies this,
saying its program is confined to generating electricity.
The United Nations Security Council has given Iran until April 28 to
cease enrichment. But Iran has rejected the demand.
Khamenei calls on Islamic world to back Hamas against Israel
Also Friday, Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called on the
Islamic world to support Hamas and its resistance against Israel.
"The Islamic world is obliged to help [Hamas] in all possible ways and
support continuation of this holy path [of resistance against Israel],"
Khamenei said in the opening ceremony of the conference.
One of the main aims of the international conference is to raise funds
for the Palestinian Authority, which has lost much of its international
aid since Hamas formed the new Palestinian government. Hamas refuses to
renounce violence, accept Israel's right to exist or abide by peace
agreements signed by the previous PA government.
The Ayatollah called on the United States and the West to respect the
democratically-elected government in Palestine and control Israeli
aggression.
"Like the U.S. failed in gaining victory in Iraq, the Americans will
also fail in realizing their aim of a Zionist-dominated Middle East,"
said Khamenei, who constitutionally has the final say on all state
affairs in Iran.
Iran is a fierce supporter of Hamas and had termed the group's victory
in last January's parliamentary elections as "Palestinians' democratic
choice for resistance." |