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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran's supreme leader orders resistance in nuclear dispute
2006-03-09
Oh, Grand Poo-Pa: Your resistance is futile.

Tehran - Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Thursday ordered resistance in the nuclear dispute.

'We will resist and continue the path of progress and pride by relying on God and wisdom,' state news television IRIB quoted Khamenei as saying.

'If we give in this time, then the Europeans will come up next with new excuses to deprive us from scientific achievements,' said Khamenei, who has the final say on all state affairs in accordance with the Iranian constitution.

The Ayatollah accused the United States for having taken the nuclear dispute to start a 'psychological war' against Iran with the final aim to prevent any progress in the Islamic state.

'What makes Islamic Iran unbearable for the Americans is the impact of Iranian policies in recent elections such as in Iraq and Palestine where the results were in favour of Islamic groups,' Khamenei said, referring to the victory of the Shiite groups in Iraq and the Hamas movement in Palestine.

The supreme leader termed nuclear technology as a 'genuine necessity' for the country's energy sector in future years when oil and gas reserves would gradually come to an end.

'Considering this genuine necessity, all officials in Iran are obliged to continue the path of nuclear technology and not surrender to any pressures,' said Khamenei, who since 1989 has been successor to the late leader of the Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.

He called on the Iranian nation not to consider the current situation being just limited to the nuclear dispute, but rather as Western efforts to deprive Iran from progress in general.

'The issue will affect our future destiny and we have therefore to show unity and resistance and despite some probable difficulties ahead of us, we will upon God's will gain victory like in other phases of our Islamic revolution,' Khamenei said.

Earlier Thursday, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said that Iran would resist political pressure on its nuclear programmes and not accept humiliation.

'We knew that in our path towards progress we would face such hindrances and we also knew that we have no other way than resistance,' ISNA news agency quoted Ahmadinejad as saying during a speech in Pole-Dokhtar city in the western Lorestan province.

The president's remarks were made after the United Nations Security Council finally took charge of the Iranian nuclear dispute.

'We follow the slogan of our beloved Imam Hussein and say 'Hey Hat Mena Zelah' (I will be damned if I give in to humiliation),' Ahmadinejad said.

He was referring to the famous remark by Imam Hussein, the Prophet Mohammed's grandson and believed by Shiites to be the Third Imam, before battle in the Karbala desert in southern Iraq 13 centuries ago, where he rejected a peace offer from his main opponent Yazid.

Hussein was eventually killed in the battle as he attempted to implement Islam in the region.

In a meeting Wednesday with families of people from Lorestan province who died in the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war, Ahmadinejad said that 'the Iranian people would even sacrifice their lives to realize their rights.

'The sacrifice mentality of the Iranians is the drive behind the nation's power of resistance,' the president said.

Ahmadinejad further said that he discussed with UN Secretary General Kofi Annan about the nature of international bodies and asked him whether the UN was created to defend the rights of nations 'or to deprive them of their rights.

'They (the West) are however perfectly aware of the fact that they cannot harm Iran because they are fragile and will be harmed more (by possible sanctions),' he added.

Chief nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani last week did not rule out that pressure or sanctions against Iran would lead to an international oil crisis and hence hurt not only Iran but also the West.

Ahmadinejad had said Wednesday that even the UN Security Council could not stop the continuation of Iran's atomic programmes.

'The path of the Iranian nation is clear and neither an international body nor a specific country can hinder the country's progress (in the nuclear field),' ISNA news agency quoted the president as saying during a speech in Lorestan.

Posted by:Captain America

#9  I'm not either. If I was a mil advisor to the MM's, my AM briefing would be: Cheney said "knock it off or we'll kill you. hard."
Posted by: Frank G   2006-03-09 22:45  

#8  I'm not sure it's that bad, yet.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2006-03-09 21:16  

#7  Frank, I'm guessing that the UAE port crap here means there's a lower chance of ANY targeting order in that part of the world.
Posted by: lotp   2006-03-09 20:39  

#6  he needs to jump up on the targetting order
Posted by: Frank G   2006-03-09 20:28  

#5  It is a well known fact that excessive heating dramatically increases the resistance of most materials. I remain astonished at how desperate Iran is to reaffirm this well known electrochemical property.
Posted by: Zenster   2006-03-09 19:42  

#4  Hello, Middle East Dominos? This the Ayatollah.

Wha-wa-wa?

"TOLLAH", not toilet, fool. Deliver to me a large Resistance.

Wha-wa-wa.

Of course with extra seething! Plus a nice side salad.
Posted by: Hyper   2006-03-09 18:19  

#3  "May the Blessings of the Bomb Almighty, and the Fellowship of the Holy Fallout, descend upon us all. This day and forever more. "

Beneath the Planet of the Apes
Posted by: doc   2006-03-09 18:04  

#2  He doesn't plan on learning from it. He plans on repeating it. Learning is inconsistent with Islam. Doing the same thing over and over hoping for a different outcome is the islamic way.
Posted by: Hupomoger Clans9827   2006-03-09 17:35  

#1  'We follow the slogan of our beloved Imam Hussein and say 'Hey Hat Mena Zelah' (I will be damned if I give in to humiliation),' Ahmadinejad said.
He was referring to the famous remark by Imam Hussein, the Prophet Mohammed's grandson and believed by Shiites to be the Third Imam, before battle in the Karbala desert in southern Iraq 13 centuries ago, where he rejected a peace offer from his main opponent Yazid.
Hussein was eventually killed in the battle as he attempted to implement Islam in the region.


There's a lesson in there, Mahmoud. Ya might wanna learn it.
Posted by: tu3031   2006-03-09 16:49  

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