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UNITED NATIONS, April 11 (Xinhua) -- Chinese
Ambassador to the United Nations Wang Guangya said Tuesday that military and
economic measures on Iran's nuclear issue are counterproductive.
Wang, who is also the current president of the UN
Security Council, told reporters that military and other economic measures that
were considered would certainly prove to be counterproductive.
"We still believe that negotiations and diplomatic
solution is the best way out of it," he observed.
Wang reiterated also that the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) is the best place to discuss Iran's nuclear issue, and
hoped Wednesday's visit to Iran by the head of the IAEA Mohammed ElBaradei will
bring fruitful results.
Recently, mass media quoted unidentified current and
former U.S. officials as reporting that the Pentagon and CIA planners have been
exploring possible targets, such as the uranium enrichment plant at Natanz and
the uranium conversion facility at Isfahan, Iran.
An article published by the latest issue of the New
Yorker magazine reported the Bush administration was considering using tactical
nuclear weapons against underground nuclear sites.
However, U.S. President George W. Bush rejected on
Monday the reports of plans for military strikes on Iran as "wild speculation,"
saying that force is not necessarily required to stop Iran from having a nuclear
weapon. Enditem |