Special Report: Iran Nuclear Crisis
WASHINGTON, June 30 (Xinhua) -- The White House
declined on Monday to make comment on a news report that Congress approved late
last year President George W. Bush's funding request of 400 million U.S. dollars
to undermine Iran's leadership.
"I couldn't comment either way," White House
spokeswoman Dana Perino told reporters after the New Yorker magazine reported
Sunday that the Bush administration has beefed up its covert operations against
Iran's leadership.
In response to a question if the United States would
resort to military actions against Iran before Bush leaves the White House
office in January 2009, Perino reiterated that Bush "is singularly focused on
trying to solve this issue diplomatically."
The New Yorker magazine quoted former military,
intelligence, and congressional sources as reporting on Sunday that following
the special investment by the Bush administration, Washington has increased its
support for Iran's minority and dissidents and intelligence gathering about
Iran's nuclear facilities.
Although U.S. clandestine operations aimed at
destabilizing Iran's government are by no means new, the "scale and the scope of
the operations in Iran, which involve the Central Intelligence Agency and the
Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), have now been significantly expanded,"
the magazine noted.
However, U.S. ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker
rejected the allegation of U.S. cross-border operations from Iraq into Iran.
"I can tell you flatly that U.S. forces are not
operating across the Iraqi border into Iran," he told CNN television.
The United States has no diplomatic relations with Iran since April 1980, five months after Iranian students occupied the American embassy in Teheran. Fifty-two Americans were held hostage for 444 days.
Washington strongly accused Tehran of trying to develop nuclear weapons under the cover of its stated goal of developing civilian nuclear power. Iran denies U.S. allegations.