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Published 19 Aug, 2003 12:00am

Iran warns Israel against attack on N-plants

TEHRAN, Aug 18: Iran warned Israel on Monday against carrying out any “adventurist” military attack on its nuclear sites.

“I hope the Zionist regime will not commit any adventurist act,” foreign ministry spokesman Hamid-Reza Assefi said.

Israel has “demonstrated that it is adventurist and does not respect any principles and, if it makes such a mistake, it will pay a very heavy price,” he added.

Mr Assefi was responding to a journalist, who referred to a report last week in the Washington Post saying that Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon had raised the issue with US President George Bush when he visited the White House recently.

The newspaper said Mr Sharon told Bush Iran was much closer to producing nuclear weapons than US intelligence believes, triggering concern that Israel is seriously considering a pre-emptive strike against Iran’s Bushehr nuclear reactor.

NPT PTOTOCOL: The spokesman further said Tehran was still discussing with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) whether to allow snap UN inspections of its nuclear sites.

“We are still discussing the additional protocol” to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Hamid-Reza Asefi said.

Tehran is under strong international pressure to prove it is not secretly developing atomic weapons by signing the extra clause, which would allow UN inspectors to descend on suspect sites without warning.

“Any decision will depend on the explanations given by the agency, on the ambiguities that exist (over the additional protocol), our responsibilities and those of the international community with regard to Iran,” he added.

The Iranian nuclear case will be reviewed by the IAEA’s board of governors on Sept 8, with the threat that the case might be forwarded to the UN Security Council.

Mr Asefi told reporters “to wait and see what will happen during the (Sept 8) meeting.”

“For the moment, we are discussing the matter with the agency,” he added.

IAEA inspectors arrived in Iran last week to carry out final checks before the crucial meeting. The Iranian press has quoted diplomatic sources as saying they found traces of enriched uranium.

Questioned about this, Asefi said: “It was not up to the diplomats to speak about such a technical and expert subject without knowing the details. It is up to the agency to judge and to give its point of view. We will wait until September.”

Tehran also invited IAEA experts to Iran earlier this month to explain the implications of the additional protocol.

“The Islamic republic was serious and transparent in its cooperation with the IAEA. The recent two missions of the agency is proof of our sincerity and the veracity of our declarations,” Asefi said.

“We hope that this cooperation will cause the agency and the board of governors to have give a precise and right judgment” on Iran’s nuclear program, he said.—AFP

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