|
Iran as bad as Nazis: Merkel |
|
|
|
|
Sunday, 05 February 2006 |
The Sunday Times
Peter Conradi
THE German chancellor, Angela Merkel, compared President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran to Adolf Hitler yesterday as Tehran vowed to resume the enrichment of uranium which could be used to make nuclear weapons.
Amid growing fears that the Iranians are intent on acquiring an “Islamic bomb”, Merkel warned that the world must not repeat the mistakes it made in appeasing the Nazis.
“Looking back to German history in the early 1930s when National
Socialism was on the rise, there were many outside Germany who said,
‘It’s only rhetoric — don’t get excited’,” Merkel told an international
security conference in Munich.
“There were times when people could have reacted differently and, in my
view, Germany is obliged to do something at the early stages,” she
added. “We want to, we must prevent Iran from developing its nuclear
programme.”
Merkel issued a blunt warning to Ahmadinejad, who has called for Israel to be “wiped off the map”.
“Iran has blatantly crossed the red line,” she said. “I say it as a
German chancellor. A president who questions Israel’s right to exist, a
president who denies the Holocaust cannot expect to receive any
tolerance from Germany.”
The statement came as the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA),
the United Nations nuclear watchdog, voted overwhelmingly in Vienna to
report Iran to the UN Security Council, expressing doubts that the
country’s nuclear programme “is exclusively for peaceful purposes”.
Iran responded by announcing that it would resume “commercial-scale”
enrichment of uranium, the fuel for power plants or bombs, which was
suspended in 2004. Ahmadinejad later ordered an end to spot checks by
IAEA inspectors from today.
Tehran described as “dead” a compromise brokered by the Kremlin under
which Russia would enrich uranium for Iran to the purity required for
nuclear power but not weapons. Moscow insisted the deal was still on
the table.
Ali Asghar Soltanieh, Iran’s ambassador to the IAEA described the vote
— carried by 27 to three, with five abstentions — as a “historic
mistake” and insisted his country would press on with its nuclear
programme.
“We don’t want confrontation but we can tolerate some problems for the
sake of principles that we are committed to,” he told The Sunday Times.
Soltanieh said it was not clear when enrichment would begin. In an
apparent sign of confusion in Tehran an Iranian news agency which had
said Ahmadinejad had given the order to start, immediately withdrew its
report last night.
The escalation in the stand-off with Iran, the world’s fourth largest
oil producer, seemed certain to drive energy prices higher on the
markets tomorrow.
It will also raise fears that Tehran might respond by increasing
support for militant Islamic groups in the Middle East, of which it is
already a major financial backer.
Donald Rumsfeld, the American defence secretary, backed the German
leader’s call for tougher action and accused Iran of being “the world’s
leading state sponsor of terrorism”.
Mostafa Mohammad-Najjar, his Iranian counterpart, rejected the charges as “ridiculous”.
It nevertheless postponed discussion of the issue at the Security
Council until next month to give Iran a last chance to climb down. But
the vehemence of Tehran’s initial reaction made this look unlikely.
It will now be up to the Security Council to decide what further action
to take. It is expected to start by making a so-called “presidential
statement” reinforcing the IAEA’s demands.
Diplomats said any tougher action, such as sanctions, were further down
the line and would depend on Iran’s behaviour. China, a permanent
member of the Security Council, opposes sanctions.
Calls for stronger measures were growing last night, however. At the
Munich conference, the influential American senator John McCain said
the military option could not be ruled out if diplomatic efforts failed
to stop Iran acquiring a nuclear bomb. “Every option must remain on the
table,” he said. “There’s only one thing worse than military action,
that is a nuclear armed Iran.” |