by Hezi Sternlicht and Yoni Hirsch
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani: We won't accept limits on "peaceful" nuclear technology, heavy-water facilities will remain operational for "nuclear medicine" • CNN's Fareed Zakaria calls current diplomatic effort with Iran a "train wreck."
Iranian President Hassan
Rouhani says Iran will not dismantle centrifuges
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Photo credit: AP |
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Iran will not dismantle its centrifuges "under
any circumstances," Iranian President Hassan Rouhani told CNN on
Thursday, joining the chorus of Iranian voices seeking to minimize the
extent of concessions and commitments publicized by the U.S. under the
interim nuclear deal implemented last week.
Rouhani's comments echoed those of Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, who told CNN on Wednesday, "We are not dismantling any centrifuges, we're not dismantling any equipment."
Speaking to CNN's Fareed Zakaria, Rouhani
reiterated that Iran was not prepared to slow down any of what he says
is a part of the country's civilian nuclear program.
"In the context of R&D and peaceful nuclear technology, we will not accept any limitations," he said.
"It is a part of our national pride, and
nuclear technology has become indigenous. And recently, we have managed
to secure very considerable prowess with regards to the fabrication of
centrifuges."
Rouhani added that Iran would accept no limitations on what he calls "nuclear medicine."
Refererring to the Arak heavy-water reactor,
Rouhani said many are concerned may be used to produce plutonium, but it
would be used strictly for medical purposes.
"We are standing on our own two feet. Iranian
scientists have designed this. We have constructed it. It's nearly
finished. So when it comes to medical concerns, we cannot accept
limitations," he said.
While claiming there was "full readiness" on
Iran's part "to take the final step" on the nuclear issue, Rouhani also
said the sanctions framework was unacceptable and illegal, adding, "We
are not afraid of threats."
Asked about the possibility of an Israeli
attack on Iranian nuclear facilities, the Iranian president said,
"Israel knows very well what the response would be. Israel knows well
our regional capability. When it comes to practice, the Israelis cannot
do that. If they do such a crazy thing, our response will make them rue
the day."
Rouhani's aggressive tone left Zakaria with doubts about a future nuclear deal.
"This strikes me as a train wreck," he told
CNN reporter Chris Cuomo after the interview. "This strikes me as a huge
obstacle because the Iranian conception of what the deal is going to
look like and the American conception now look like they are miles
apart. For the first time, you have the president of Iran unequivocally
saying there will be no destruction of centrifuges. He also made clear
in the interview with me that the two heavy-water reactors would
continue in operation. So this seems like -- you know, this is
stillborn."
Is the White House turning a blind eye?
In response to questions about Rouhani's tone
in the CNN interview, White House press secretary Jay Carney said, "I
think we've answered repeatedly that how Iranian officials characterize
this for a domestic audience matters far less to us than what they are
actually doing."
Meanwhile Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
addressed the Iranian issue on Friday. "What I said [would happen] is
happening. I said there would be an attempt to dissolve the sanctions
and that is happening. I said that they would not necessarily accept the
Western interpretation [of the deal] and that is correct," he said.
A New York Times editorial on Friday also deplored Rouhani's so-called charm offensive.
"His benign image and deft political skills
could not erase or excuse the ugly fact that Iran remains the main ally
of Syria's president, Bashar al-Assad, in the destruction of Syria and
its people," the article reads.
The New York Times also revealed at the end of the week
that a three-year study by the Pentagon found that U.S. intelligence
agencies are ill-equipped to detect the rate at which foreign powers
develop nuclear weapons. In cases like Iran, the study found, the
detection abilities are "either inadequate, or more often, do not
exist."
Hezi Sternlicht and Yoni Hirsch
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=15011
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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