Published: 11:23AM Tuesday July 08, 2008
Source: Reuters
Iran started war games and its president rejected a demand by
major powers that it stop enriching uranium as illegitimate,
showing no sign of backing down in a stand-off over Tehran's
nuclear ambitions.
Missile units of the elite Revolutionary Guards' naval and air
forces began war games, Iranian news agencies said, hours after the
US Navy said it had begun exercises in the Gulf.
Speculation about an attack on the world's fourth biggest oil
exporter over its nuclear programme rose after a report last month
said Israel had practised such a strike.
Fears of military confrontation helped send world oil prices to
record highs.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Monday his country
would not stop enriching uranium, work which Tehran says is aimed
at generating power but which the West fears may be part of a
covert nuclear weapons programme.
It was Ahmadinejad's first comment on the dispute since Iran
delivered its response on Friday to a package of incentives offered
by world powers seeking to curb its nuclear activities. Details of
the response were not made public.
"They offer to hold talks but at the same time they threaten us and
say we should accept their illegitimate demand to halt (enrichment
work)," Ahmadinejad told reporters in Malaysia, where he was
attending a summit of eight developing countries.
"They want us to abandon our right (to nuclear technology)," the
president said.
By contrast, Iran's Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki spoke
during the weekend of a new environment for diplomacy over Iran's
nuclear programme.
The United States, China, Russia, Britain, France and Germany
demand that Iran suspend its enrichment work before formal talks
can start on their revised package of incentives, which includes
help to develop a civilian nuclear programme.
Tehran has repeatedly refused to stop producing enriched uranium,
which can be used as fuel for power plants, or, if refined much
more, can provide material for nuclear weapons.
The offer of trade and other incentives proposed by the world
powers was presented last month by EU foreign policy chief Javier
Solana to Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili.
Iran has put forward its own bundle of proposals aimed at resolving
the dispute and has said it was encouraged by common points between
the two separate packages.
Mixed signals
So far the Iranian government's formal response to the latest offer
has not been made public and there have been mixed signals in
statements by its senior officials.
Senior officials from world powers held a conference call on Monday
to discuss Iran's response, the State Department said.
"We are consulting with our partners in the P5+1 (permanent five UN
Security Council members plus Germany) on issues related to that
response and what we might hear and what we have heard thus far," a
spokesman said of the conference call.
The goals of Iran's war games included raising combat readiness and
the capability of missile units. Exercises started a few hours ago,
the Fars and Mehr news agencies said, without giving details on
where the manoeuvres were taking place.
The Guards often hold manoeuvres in the Gulf.
The Revolutionary Guards' head said in remarks published in late
June that Tehran would impose controls on shipping in the Gulf and
the strategic Strait of Hormuz if it was attacked.
The US Navy last week vowed that Iran would not be allowed to block
the Gulf waterway which carries crude from the world's largest oil
exporting region.
The US Navy on Monday said two US vessels were taking part in its
exercise alongside a British warship and one from Bahrain, a Gulf
Arab ally which hosts the Fifth Fleet.
Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama said on Monday that
harsh US rhetoric toward Iran appeared to be contributing to the
surge in oil prices and that a calmer approach might help soothe
the markets.
"There are some geopolitical issues that affect the price of oil,"
he added. "So for us to ratchet down the rhetoric when it comes to
Iran, for example, and engage in tough, principled diplomacy, as
I've called for, might calm the markets down."
Before news of the Iranian war games, oil dropped over $4 a barrel
Monday on profit taking and signals that Iran could be more
flexible in negotiations over its nuclear programme.
US crude settled at $141.37 a barrel, down $3.92 and below Friday's
low of $143.22.
Brent crude settled at $141.87 a barrel, down $2.55.
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