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กกกกSpecial Report:
Iran Nuclear Crisis
WASHINGTON, March 16 (Xinhuanet) -- International
diplomatic efforts to persuade Iran to give up its nuclear program must succeed
to avoid confrontation, U.S. President George W. Bush said in a national
security report Thursday.
"We may face no greater challenge from a single
country than from Iran," Bush said in the document.
Diplomatic efforts must succeed "if confrontation is
to be avoided," Bush said in the security document.
Seeking to draw a line between the Iranian government
and the Iranian people, Bush said Washington's strategy is to "block the threats
posed by the regime" while expanding its engagement with the people.
The United States and the European Union (EU), which
have said Iran is seeking the capability of making nuclear weapons, are pushing
for a full suspension of Iran's nuclear fuel activities.
Tehran insists that its nuclear program is solely
aimed at power generation and that it has the right to conduct uranium
enrichment.
Bush made clear in the document that Washington does
not view the failure to find the weapons of mass destruction in Iraq as a blow
to its strategy of preventive war.
Reaffirming the strategy of preventive war and U.S.
unilateralism in the security report, Bush said that "we do not rule out the use
of force before attacks occur" and that "we must be prepared to act alone if
necessary."
The U.S. launched the war against Iraq in 2003 on
grounds that then Iraqi President Saddam Hussein had possessed weapons of mass
destruction, but no such weapons have been found despite many searches across
the country since its occupation. Enditem |