Special report: Iran Nuclear Crisis
TEHRAN, Jan. 14 (Xinhua) -- Iranian Foreign Ministry
Spokesman Seyed Mohammad Ali Hosseini Sunday said that his country continued the
nuclear operation at Natanze nuclear facilities despite the UN sanction
resolution against Tehran.
"The nuclear activities are continuing," Hosseini
told reporters at his weekly press conference.
The UN Security Council last month passed Resolution
1737, deciding to impose sanctions on Iran's nuclear and missile program and
called on the country to suspend the enrichment activities.
However, Iran denied the UN demand and vowed to
install 3,000 centrifuges by March of 2007.
Meanwhile, the spokesman also slammed at the recent
U.S. raid on Iran' consulate general in the northern Iraqi city of Arbil, saying
such move was aimed at imposing pressure on Tehran to implement Washington's new
strategy.
Hosseini rejected the U.S. allegations that the
arrested five diplomats had connections with Iraqi insurgents, saying that "What
Americans accused was incorrect and exaggeration against Iran in order to
justify their acts."
He added that "all their actions have been in conformity with the diplomatic rules and regulations."
The U.S. military said in a statement Sunday that the
five arrested Iranians in northern Iraq had been connected to an Iranian
Revolutionary Guard faction that funds and arms insurgents in Iraq.
In the wake of the U.S. statement, Hosseini rejected
a U.S. proposal for talks between U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and
her Iranian counterpart, saying that "under the present circumstances, speaking
of negotiations is meaningless and sounds hypocritical."
Rice has recently voiced her preparedness to attend
talks with Iran's foreign minister on the basis of Iran's suspension of its
enrichment activities prior to such negotiations.
The U.S. forces in Iraq Thursday morning raided the
Iranian consulate in Iraq's northern city of Arbil and arrested five of its
staff members. Iran has voiced its indignation to the incident and urged the
Iraqi government to help release the diplomats.
The United States has accused Iran of supporting the
Iraqi insurgents to fight with coalition forces since the fall of Saddam
Hussein's regime in 2003, but Tehran has denied it, saying such allegations were
deliberate intervention to the Iran-Iraq ties by the
U.S..