Posted on 04/15/2006 9:53:03 AM PDT by Erik Latranyi
Iran said it could defeat any American military action over its controversial nuclear drive, in one of the Islamic regime's boldest challenges yet to the United States.
"You can start a war but it won't be you who finishes it," said General Yahya Rahim Safavi, the head of the Revolutionary Guards and among the regime's most powerful figures.
"The Americans know better than anyone that their troops in the region and in Iraq are vulnerable. I would advise them not to commit such a strategic error," he told reporters on the sidelines of a pro-Palestinian conference in Tehran.
The United States accuses Iran of using an atomic energy drive as a mask for weapons development. Last weekend US news reports said President George W. Bush's administration was refining plans for preventive strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities.
"I would advise them to first get out of their quagmire in Iraq before getting into an even bigger one," General Safavi said with a grin.
"We have American forces in the region under total surveillance. For the past two years, we have been ready for any scenario, whether sanctions or an attack."
Iran announced this week it had successfully enriched uranium to make nuclear fuel, despite a UN Security Council demand for the sensitive work to be halted by April 28.
The Islamic regime says it only wants to generate atomic energy, but enrichment can be extended to make the fissile core of a nuclear warhead -- something the United States is convinced that "axis of evil" member Iran wants to acquire.
At a Friday prayer sermon in Tehran, senior cleric Ayatollah Ahmad Janati simply branded the US as a "decaying power" lacking the "stamina" to block Iran's ambitions.
And hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad told AFP that a US push for tough United Nations sanctions was of "no importance."
"She is free to say whatever she wants," the president replied when asked to respond to comments by US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice highlighting part of the UN charter that provides for sanctions backed up by the threat of military action.
"We give no importance to her comments," he said with a broad smile.
On Thursday, Rice said that faced with Iran's intransigence, the United States "will look at the full range of options available to the United Nations."
"There is no doubt that Iran continues to defy the will of the international community," Rice said, after Iran also dismissed a personal appeal from the UN atomic watchdog chief Mohamed ElBaradei.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) chief must give a report at the end of April on Iranian compliance with the Security Council demand. In Tehran he said that after three years of investigations Iran's activities were "still hazy and not very clear."
Although the United States has been prodding the council to take a tough stand against the Islamic republic, including possible sanctions, it has run into opposition from veto-wielding members Russia and China.
Representatives of the five permanent members of the Security Council plus Germany are to meet in Moscow Tuesday to discuss the crisis.
In seeking to deter international action, Iran has been playing up its oil wealth, its military might in strategic Gulf waters and its influence across the region -- such as in Iraq, Lebanon and the Palestinian territories.
At the Tehran conference, Iran continued to thumb its nose at the United States and Israel.
"The Zionist regime is an injustice and by its very nature a permanent threat," Ahmadinejad told the gathering of regime officials, visiting Palestinian militant leaders and foreign sympathizers.
"Whether you like it or not, the Zionist regime is on the road to being eliminated," said Ahmadinejad, whose regime does not recognise Israel and who drew international condemnation last year when he said Israel should be "wiped off the map."
Unfazed by his critics, the hardliner went on to repeat his controversial stance on the Holocaust.
"If there is serious doubt over the Holocaust, there is no doubt over the catastrophe and Holocaust being faced by the Palestinians," said the president, who had previously dismissed as a "myth" the killing of an estimated six million Jews by the Nazis and their allies during World War II.
"I tell the governments who support Zionism to ... let the migrants (Jews) return to their countries of origin. If you think you owe them something, give them some of your land," he said.
Iran's turbaned supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, also accused the United States of seeking to place the entire region under Israeli control.
"The plots by the American government against Iran, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon aimed at governing the Middle East with the control of the Zionist regime will not succeed," Khamenei said.
There was no immediate reaction from Washington, but French Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy severely condemned Ahmadinejad for his latest remarks on Israel.
"As I have had occasion to do before, when the Iranian president made similar statements, I condemn these inacceptable remarks in the strongest possible terms," Douste-Blazy said in a statement.
"Israel's right to exist and the reality of the Holocaust should not be disputed," he added.
Bring it.
Our political class is no doubt sucking its collective thumb over this.
They really do want to go up in a puff of smoke don't they.
They wouldn't have a prayer. After all, we have the world's largest, unsinkable aircraft carrier in the region..."The USS Iraq".
All I wanted to know about Muslims I learned on 9/11.
Ahmadinejad's 15 minutes are up. We need to take him out.
Yes, their reaction sites all need to be taken out, yes, the mullahs got to go, yes their military needs to be destroyed, but do you really feel the US has that capability right now to do so? We don't have the military might we once had and the only way to remedy that is to almost triple the size of our military. You really think the liberals in this nation will allow that? We need three times the amount of arsenal we have now. You think the liberals will allow us to have that?
As much as I hate to say, the only way to permanently take care of Iran is through nuclear weaponry. We all know how that will play out. World War III is now upon us. God help us.
Is this guy running on the Dihmwit ticket or what!!!! Maybe he's already elected!!!
If it walks like a Kennedy, Talks like a Kennedy, it must be a TERRORIST!!!!
Say's you, Islamofascist A$$hole.
We should leak a story that we have already targeted and have missle ready to go nuke ones And as soon as the pop one anywhere outside theier country we let them fly also leak our estimates of cauilties deaths ect
Am the only one that is tired of being threatened by those pirates? Thank goodness Im not running things, or we would be dumping our garbage in IRAN for the 1000 years.
That word is "artillery".
Hey Pig F@cker, Saddam said the same thing.
ah-MAD-ine-JIHAD and Chavez and Whatshisface of Cuba, ought to have a sleepover party and do each other. Maybe they could go to Aruba and walk on the beach, late at night......
Look how quickly we defeated Iraq....twice. They won't keep us from commanding the skies. For that reason, they'll never be able to maneuver any large forces against ours. If anything, we've held back in past conflicts and made "proportional responses" to terrorist attacks. They really don't want to play around with us.
I have an Idea! Let's give them a nuclear bomb. Let's wrap it up like a birthday present and include a big card that says, "Surprise!". Just don't tell them it's set to go off when they open the package.
Oh please, now don't start that. I was in favor of going into Iraq and no I wasn't on that particular bandwagon. Don't start spread allegations that aren't true.
I just don't see any good outcome coming out of any incursion into Iran. But I don't see any way of getting around it either. As I said, with Russia, China and North Korea supplying them with whatever they want I see any such conflict with Iran being much more bloody. I also see a greater increase in terrorism both here and abroad if the same tactics are used in Iran as were used in Iraq.
Opps, I forgot to turn the bold off</b>
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.