اهداف جامعه ایرانی چیست؟ « ما چگونه فکر می کنیم» و آنچه که در ایران مهم انگاشته می شود.

۱۳۸۶ خرداد ۳, پنجشنبه

GOP Candidates Criticize ABC News Report on CIA-Iran Plan

Two Republican presidential candidates today criticized the ABC News report Tuesday about the CIA’s covert plan to destabilize the Iranian regime.

“I was shocked to see the ABC News report regarding covert action in Iran,” Mitt Romney said as he opened a session with reporters in Tulsa, Okla.

Congressman Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., called for an investigation into who leaked the information and “condemned” ABC News for “running the story which could jeopardize American lives.”

The ABC News story reported that President Bush had given the CIA authorization to conduct a nonlethal covert action against Iran involving propaganda, disinformation and the manipulation of Iran’s international banking transactions.

“The reporting has the potential of jeopardizing our national security. To put it quite plainly, it has the potential of affecting human life, we may never know,” Romney said.

Romney said he had called ABC News president David Westin to register his concerns.

In a statement ABC News said, “In the six days since we first contacted the CIA and the White House, at no time did they indicate that broadcasting this report would jeopardize lives or operations on the ground. ABC News management gave them the repeated opportunity to make whatever objection they wanted to regarding our report. They chose not to.”

ABC News said, “This piece was very carefully reported, and it puts solid facts on the table concerning a crucial foreign policy challenge facing the United States and the world.”

IAEA chief says Iran could have nuclear bomb in 3-8 years

LUXEMBOURG (AFP) - Iran could develop a nuclear weapon in three to eight years, the head of the UN atomic watchdog said Thursday, while warning the West against military action to stop countries becoming nuclear powers.

"We cannot bomb our way to security," Mohamed ElBaradei, the International Atomic Energy Agency chief, told an anti-proliferation conference in Luxembourg.

While US President George W. Bush said the United States and its European allies would seek "to strengthen our sanction regime" against Iran's defiance of UN demands to suspend its nuclear programme, Iran's hardline president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad again dismissed the threats.

France and the United States said the UN Security Council would have to discuss a third package of sanctions against Iran unless it freezes sensitive uranium enrichment work.

ElBaradei said it was difficult to say exactly how far Iran was from developing a nuclear weapon, if it wanted to, but added that he agreed with US assessments that it could happen in the next decade.

"In other words three to eight years from now," he said.

ElBaradei told reporters: "We are moving toward Iran building capacity and knowledge without the agency in a position to be able to verify the nature or the scope of that programme.

"If we continue in that direction, we will end up with a major confrontation," he said.

In the conference, ElBaradei said world powers should slash their nuclear arsenals to set an example to countries trying to develop such weapons.

He urged the five permanent members of the UN Security Council -- Britain, China, France and the United States -- to refrain from using the threat of force to dissuade countries from developing atomic weapons.

"Rather we should focus on addressing the underlying causes," he added, listing growing poverty as a factor that leads to human rights abuses, humiliation and ultimately violence.

Iran's president indicated the Islamic republic was in no mood to cave into UN demands.

"The enemies aim to prevent us from using peaceful nuclear technology, not for scientific reasons but because they want to eradicate the roots of the principles of the Islamic republic," Ahmadinejad said.

"Therefore if we stop, even for a moment, they will achieve their aims," he told elite Revolutionary Guards commanders, news agencies said.

His comments came one day after the IAEA said in a new report that Iran was defying UN Security Council demands to stop enriching uranium.

The IAEA board will review the report in June, paving the way for a Security Council meeting that could agree new sanctions.

The United States said that unless Iran agreed to a longstanding offer to suspend sensitive nuclear work as a prelude to negotiations, there was no other option than a drive for further sanctions.

"Iran is once again thumbing its nose at the international community," US Under Secretary of State Nicholas Burns said.

New French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said Paris backed the rapid adoption of "new sanctions" against Iran if it maintains its refusal.

The German presidency of the EU also urged Iran to "reconsider its policy and to comply with the demands of the international community."

China, which along with Russia has economic interests in Iran and has tempered previous UN resolutions along with Russia, emphasised that it wanted to see a diplomatic end to the standoff.

Iran refuses to suspend uranium enrichment, a process that can be used to make nuclear fuel and highly enriched uranium for the explosive core of an atomic bomb.

The United States accuses Iran of seeking nuclear weapons but the Islamic republic insists it just wants to generate energy for a growing population.

Washington has always said it wants to resolve the crisis through diplomacy but has never ruled out military action to bring Tehran to heel. On Wednesday it appeared to send a clear warning to Iran through its navy.

The nuclear-powered aircraft carriers USS John Stennis and USS Nimitz sailed through the Strait of Hormuz into the Gulf.

"With the backing of the Iranian nation, we are not afraid of the enemies' psychological wars," retorted Ahmadinejad.

European countries insist that diplomatic efforts are not exhausted, and EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana is due to meet Iran's top nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani for key talks on May 31.