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The Last
Word: Javad Zarif—Finding
the 'Missing Link'
Iran's position is very clear: We don't
intend to attack any country. We've never done that in the past, we'll never do
it in the future.
Newsweek
International
April 24, 2006 issue -
Last Tuesday fiery Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad proudly boasted that his country had joined
"the club of nuclear countries" after successfully enriching uranium.
The move defied U.N. calls for Tehran
to suspend its nuclear program, and came on the eve of an inspection visit by
Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the International Atomic
Energy Agency. Even with the threat of U.N. sanctions looming and rumors of a U.S. military strike swirling, Ahmadinejad vowed that Iran would continue its course. NEWSWEEK's Malcolm Beith spoke to
Javad Zarif,
Iran's
permanent representative to the United Nations, about the conflict last week.
Excerpts:
BEITH: What are your
feelings about President Ahmadinejad's tough
position?
ZARIF: We made it
very clear that there are two fundamental concepts. One is that Iran has inalienable rights under the NPT
[nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty] and respect for these rights—both for Iran as well as
any other country [that is a] member of the NPT—is imperative for the authority
and integrity of the treaty. The second aspect of our position has been that Iran wants to
exercise its rights in an atmosphere of tranquillity
where there is no concern about any proliferation suspicions, and for that we
have been and are prepared to negotiate in order to allay any concerns.
Meanwhile, uranium
enrichment continues. Are you sending a contradictory message?
No, because we
have said that Iran
will not respond well to pressure. A suspension of the uranium-enrichment
program was in place for over two years. That would have provided the necessary
time to reach a politically acceptable negotiated solution. So we need to find
out: "What is that missing link that prevented a negotiated
solution?" I would submit that the missing link is the necessary political
will, combined with a mentality that through pressure imposition and
intimidation, political results can be achieved.
Is Iran more amenable to working with Russia and China,
rather than the United
States, to come to an agreement?
We are open to
working with everybody. If you have a more reasonable and realistic approach to
the resolution of this problem then you have a better chance of success. Until
now, the positions offered by Russia
and China
have been more conducive to a successful outcome.
Iranian nuclear chief Gholamreza Aghazadeh recently
said that Iran
would be willing to give the West a share in enrichment facilities in order to ease
concerns that it was being used for military purposes.
Yes. One of the
possibilities presented by Iran
was to create a regional consortium so that various countries could have a
share both in ownership and operation of the facility. It [would] be a consortium,
jointly owned and operated. [But] every proposal that has been on the table has
failed to receive any serious consideration.
Is Iran willing to
risk sanctions?
Iran does not want to invite
sanctions. We're not seeking confrontation. But at the same time the prospect
of Iran
accepting an imposition because that carries with it some sticks is not a
prospect that is appealing to the Iranian population.
How would Iran
respond to a military strike?
I don't think Iran should
respond to it. I think what is being talked about in Washington is a threat
to the international community as a whole and a threat to the rule of law. We
live in the 21st century, we have a body of international law that prohibits
the threat of wars—not even the use of wars but the threat of wars—and the
United States continues to live in the 19th century. Somebody must remind
President Bush that it's an outdated statement to say that "all options
are on the table."
Ahmadinejad has made threats to Israel.
No, the Iranian
president has never made any threats against any other country. In fact, Iran has been on the receiving side of threats
from Israel
which go back long before President Ahmadinejad ran
for office.
He's said Israel should
be "wiped off the map."
The rhetoric that
is used by the U.S.
administration as well as Israeli officials against Iran
is by far more fiery and more provocative than any
statement that has come out of Iran.
Iran's
position is very clear: We don't intend to attack any country. We've never done
that in the past, we'll never do it in the future. I wonder whether Israel or the United States can make that
statement.
If Iran doesn't
intend to make weapons, is it that important to be a nuclear power?
Iran doesn't want to have weapons. We
believe that those who possess nuclear weapons lack the necessary logic to
understand that being able to destroy this planet is simply ridiculous and
inhuman. We believe Iran
has the right to any technology. That is different from even attempting to
[possess] a weapon that we consider to be illegal—for everybody—and
illegitimate.
© 2006
Newsweek, Inc.

© 2006 MSNBC.com
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