Iran threatens to use oil in NK standoff (AP) Updated: 2006-03-12 15:15
Iran on Saturday explicitly warned for the first time that it could use oil
as a weapon if the U.N. Security Council imposes sanctions over an Iranian
nuclear program that the U.S. and others suspect is trying to produce atomic
bombs.
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Iranian female police officers wearing chadors parade, during a
female police graduation ceremony at the Police Academy in Tehran, Iran,
Saturday, March, 11, 2006. [AP] |
Later in the day, diplomats said Russia is pushing for a new round of
international talks to be held away from U.N. headquarters, apparently hoping to
head off a showdown in the council.
Iranian Interior Minister Mostafa Pourmohammadi raised the possibility of
using Iran's oil and natural gas supplies as a weapon in the international
standoff and also noted Iran's strategic location at a chokepoint for a vital
Persian Gulf oil route.
"If (they) politicize our nuclear case, we will use any means. We are rich in
energy resources. We have control over the biggest and the most sensitive energy
route of the world," Pourmohammadi was quoted as saying by the official Islamic
Republic News Agency.
Iran is the No. 2 producer in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries after Saudi Arabia. It also lies on one side of the narrow Strait of
Hormuz, a key passage for most of the crude oil shipped from the Persian Gulf
nations.
Pourmohammadi's statements were the most specific yet in a series of threats
issued by Iranian officials as the Security Council discusses how to cajole Iran
into reimposing a freeze on uranium enrichment and fully cooperating with a U.N.
probe of its suspect nuclear program.
Iran's government denies it is trying to develop atomic weapons, saying its
program is intended only to produce fuel for nuclear reactors that generate
electricity.
Tehran insists the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty gives it the right to
enrich uranium for reactor fuel, even though the process also can produce the
fissile material needed to make atomic bombs.
Russia, which has economic and political ties to Iran, has been trying to
mediate a settlement and avoid U.N. sanctions. It is thought to fear Iran could
spurn negotiations entirely at a time when the West fears the Islamic state is
determined to obtain atomic weapons.
In Vienna, Austria, a Western diplomat told The Associated Press that the
Kremlin is trying to arrange talks March 20 among the five permanent Security
Council members 锟斤拷 the United States, China, Russia, Britain and France 锟斤拷 and
Germany.
The meeting is envisioned for Vienna because Russia wants to take the focus
off the council's deliberations in New York, said the diplomat, who agreed to
give details of the confidential discussions only on condition of anonymity.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov floated the idea of multilateral talks
on Iran earlier in the week but did not suggest a date or venue. On Friday, John
Bolton, America's ambassador to the Security Council, also said continuing
consultations made "a lot of sense."
But the Western diplomat suggested Washington wants the main focus to remain
on the Security Council, emphasizing that route was approved in January by
Lavrov and the foreign ministers of the other permanent members.
The five permanent council members considered proposals Friday on how to get
Iran to answer questions about its nuclear program, abandon uranium enrichment
and stop construction on a reactor.
The five planned another meeting Monday morning to look at a revised draft of
a resolution involving Iran, the Western diplomat said.
Another diplomat who had seen the draft told AP it calls on Iran to halt
construction of its heavy-water reactor and stop all uranium enrichment, but
does not contain any threat of punishment against the Iranians.
The lack of a threat is a clear effort to get Russia and China on board. If
that does not happen, Bolton and other senior U.S. officials have suggested
Washington might try to rally its allies to impose their own targeted
sanctions.
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