Special report:
Iran Nuclear
Crisis
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TEHRAN, June 4 (Xinhua) -- Iran's
Supreme Leader Ayatollah AliKhamenei said on Sunday that if the United States
makes a "wrong step" over Iran, oil flow in the region would be affected."
If you (Washington) make a wrong step over Iran,
energy flow in the region will certainly be endangered," Khamenei said in a
speech broadcast on state television.
"You (Washington) will be unable to secure the energy
flow in this region," he stressed.
Khamenei also declared that Iran would not give up
its right to peaceful nuclear energy in the face of "threats and bribes" and
praised efforts by Iranian nuclear scientists in developing peaceful nuclear
technology.
"We have achieved a lot of scientific goals and this
is a resource that our late imam had saved for us," Khamenei said in the speech
marking the 17th anniversary of the death of Iran's Islamic revolutionary leader
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. Iran is close to the Hormuz Strait, which is a
strategic waterway that controls oceangoing traffic to and from the oil-rich
Gulf states.
Iran, a member of the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC), is the world's fourth largest oil producing country.
Khamenei made the threat one day after Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said that Tehran was ready to hold "fair and
unconditional" talks with the West over Iran's nuclear issue.
Ahmadinejad also said that Iran would decide, on the
basis of Iran's national interests, on a new European proposal aimed to solve
the standoff over the nuclear issue.
Foreign ministers of the five permanent members of
the UN Security Council--the U.S., France, Britain, Russia and China--plus
Germany agreed Thursday upon the European offer of incentives if Iran halts
uranium enrichment and punishments if Tehran does not comply.
EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana is expected to
convey the offer to Iran soon. No details about the proposal have been unveiled.
Meanwhile, during a phone call with UN Secretary
General Kofi Annan on Saturday, Ahmadinejad reasserted that Iran was ready to
hold talks on its nuclear program, adding that Iran preferred the negotiations
to be held "democratically without any precondition or any threat."
Annan, on his part, said that continued negotiation
was the only way to help settle Iran's disputed nuclear issue, according to
Iran's state media.
"I understand that Iran is opposing any threat to its
national security and I have drawn attention of the U.S. and Europeans to the
fact that Iran is right to dismiss any threat concerning the nuclear program,"
the U.N. chief was quoted as saying. Enditem