IRAN - Jun 3 - Tehran Threatens Oil Disruption In Event Of US 'Mistake'.
Tehran's supreme leader Ayat Ali Khamenei warns that energy
supplies from the Gulf will be disrupted if the US makes a
"mistake" against his country, as officials in Tehran prepares
to receive the details of an international package of "carrots and
sticks" aimed at resolving the nuclear dispute. In an attempt to
raise the diplomatic stakes and deflect growing international pressure,
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the ultimate decision-maker, appeared to
contradict earlier assurances from Tehran that the world's fourth
largest oil producer would not use the oil weapon. "If Americans
make a mistake about Iran, the flow of energy from this region will
definitely be jeopardised", he said in a speech, insisting,
however, that Iran would never be the initiator of war. His comments are
likely to unsettle oil markets when they open today. Iranian analysts
say the regime considers one of its most potent cards the ability to
disrupt energy supplies through the straits of Hormuz, from which much
of the world's oil shipments pass. But the US State Sec Condoleezza
Rice, played down the leader's threats, highlighting that Iran
depended heavily on oil revenues. Khamenei did not specifically mention
last week's US offer of talks with Iran if it agreed to suspend
uranium enrichment and processing activities. But he referred scathingly
to a "recent message from Americans", describing it as
"rude, cheap and full of foolish arrogance". Sticking to
Iran's official position that it has no intention of building a
nuclear bomb, he suggested the regime felt emboldened and saw no need to
make concessions at this time. He said the government in Tehran was
"one of the most popular in the last 100 years since the
constitutional revolution", while the Bush administration was
"one of the most hated governments in the history of the US".
Despite an agreement reached Jun 1 by the US, UK, France, Russia, China
and Germany, to offer Tehran a package of incentives in return for
suspending uranium enrichment - or move to impose penalties at the UN
Security Council - Khamenei insisted that there was no international
consensus on Iran policy. Yet the bold rhetoric combined with milder
messages from other senior officials, including the fundamentalist Pres
Mahmoud Ahmadi-Nejad. After speaking with the UN secretary-general Kofi
Annan, Ahmadi-Nejad said on Jun 3 Iran would study the international
proposals and not rush to judgment. The package is set to be delivered
to Iran by the EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana, possibly this
week. Analysts in Tehran said the occasion of Khamenei's speech
marking the anniversary of the death of Ayat Ruhollah Khomeini, founder
of the Islamic Republic, required the projection of a defiant image. But
the leader's comments also highlighted the challenge ahead for the
world community in trying to persuade the regime to give up uranium
enrichment. "The leader wants to show that Iran can stand firm and
that it won't falter", said one analyst. "At the same
time. Iran will study the proposals and postpone any decision on them as
long as possible". Khamenei dismissed the promise of fuel supplies
to Iran's nuclear plants from abroad, which is said to be part of
the international offer. No "honest" official, he said, would
agree to forgo nuclear technology and beg western nations for energy.
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