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Saturday, April 12
The Indiana Daily Student

world

Iran vows to continue nuclear program

Country's leader calls U.S. "hollow superpower"

TEHRAN, Iran -- Iran's president lashed out Wednesday at the United States and vowed to resist the pressure of "bully countries" as European nations circulated a draft resolution urging that Tehran be brought before the U.N. Security Council for its nuclear activities.\nIn a speech to thousands of supporters hours after President Bush's State of the Union address, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad derided the United States as a "hollow superpower" that is "tainted with the blood of nations" and said Tehran would continue its nuclear program.\n"Nuclear energy is our right, and we will resist until this right is fully realized," Ahmadinejad told the crowd in the southern Iran city of Bushehr, the site of Iran's only nuclear power plant.\n"Our nation can't give in to the coercion of some bully countries who imagine they are the whole world and see themselves equal to the entire globe," he added.\nThe crowd responded with chants of "Nuclear energy is our right!"\nIran's top nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani, said at a news conference the Islamic republic would halt intrusive U.N. inspections of its nuclear facilities and resume large-scale enrichment of uranium if it is taken before the U.N. Security Council, which could impose sanctions.\nLarijani also said Iran remains committed to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, despite calls from hard-line newspapers to withdraw from the agreement if the International Atomic Energy Agency reports Iran to the Security Council on Thursday, as expected.\nIran's main enrichment plant at Natanz "is ready for work," he said.\n"We only need to notify the IAEA that we are resuming enrichment. When we do that is our call," Larijani said. "If Iran is reported to the Security Council, we will do it quickly," he added.\nReferring to the IAEA meeting, he added: "In case the issue is reported or referred to the Security Council, we will have to stop implementation of the Additional Protocol" -- a procedure that allows IAEA inspectors to carry out intrusive searches of a country's nuclear facilities without warning.\n"The result would be Iran's cooperating with the IAEA at a low level, which is against our wishes. All our suspensions on nuclear activities would be lifted," he said, meaning that Iran would feel free to enrich uranium without hindrance.\nIran insists its nuclear program is civilian only and has no other purpose than to generate power. Enrichment can produce either fuel for a nuclear reactor or the material needed to build a warhead.\nIn Vienna, Austria, a draft IAEA resolution requests the agency's director general Mohamed ElBaradei "to report to the Security Council" on steps Iran needs to take to dispel fears that it might want to make nuclear arms. It was being circulated among the 35-member IAEA board for comments before being submitted for approval at Thursday's board meeting, and a copy was made available to The Associated Press.\nThe development was a boost to Washington, the main proponent of bringing Iran before the Security Council.

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