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Iran Guards test missiles as war games end: state media

Brazil mum on Iran sanctions vote position in UN: FM
Sao Paulo (AFP) April 25, 2010 - Brazil refused Sunday to say whether it would vote against a UN resolution imposing sanctions against Iran, but Foreign Minister Celso Amorim stated he did not believe Tehran was close to building a nuclear bomb. Asked in an interview with the newspaper O Estado de Sao Paulo whether Brazil would vote "No" to such a resolution, Amorim said: "I am not going to give that information. We still have to analyze." The United States, Britain and France are hoping to put a sanctions resolution to the UN Security Council within weeks.

For such a measure to pass, nine of the 15 members of the Security Council -- of which Brazil is a temporary member -- would have to vote in favor, as long as none of the five permanent members, which include China and Russia, employ their veto. Amorim's interview was published just before the Brazilian foreign minister was to meet Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Tehran on Monday to prepare for a May 16-17 trip to Iran by Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. Brazil has repeatedly defended Iran's nuclear program, saying the Islamic republic has the right to peaceful nuclear energy.

It has given little credence to US arguments -- denied by Tehran -- that Iran was trying to secretly develop a nuclear arsenal. Amorim reinforced that view in the interview, saying: "I don't see Iran being close to making a bomb." He also said: "Call us naive, but I think those who believe in everything the US intelligence service says are much more naive. Look at the case of Iraq."
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) April 25, 2010
Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards on Sunday fired five shore-to-sea and sea-to-sea missiles, ending four days of war games in the strategic Strait of Hormuz and the Gulf, state media reported.

"Iran-made Nasr (Victory), Saeqeh (Lightning) and Noor (Light) missiles were tested. They have different ranges," Defence Minister Brigadier General Ahmad Vahidi told the ISNA news agency without elaborating on what those were.

"The Saeqeh is a cruise missle with appropriate payload," he added.

Earlier, state television reported that the five naval missiles successfully hit a single target simultaneously.

Vahidi, also a commander in the Guards, said that several drones of the sort that have sparked the concern of US commanders in neighbouring Afghanistan were also used in the exercise, dubbed "Prophet V."

"A number of locally manufactured drones were tested," Vahidi said. "They were able to send intelligence about enemy movements to our ground command posts," he said.

"We also tested laser smart weapons. They hit their targets with 100 percent accuracy," he said. He did not give further details.

Since Thursday, the Guards have been conducting manoeuvres in the Gulf and in the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway through which 40 percent of the world's sea-borne oil supplies pass.

Iran boasts it also has missiles that can hit targets in arch-foe Israel as well as US interests in the region, although Western defence analysts have questioned some of its claims about its successes with its ballistic programme.

Thursday marked the 31st anniversary of the formation of the Guards by a decree from Iran's late revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini soon after the 1979 revolution.

The corps is one of Iran's most powerful institutions and falls under the direct command of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who succeeded Khomeini as supreme leader in 1989.

Vahidi dismissed talk of a fourth round of UN sanctions against Tehran specifically targeting the Guards' business interests.

"The Guards' greatest enemies have always been the aggressive Zionist and US regimes, and that remains the case today," he said.

"From the beginning the corps stood against any form of aggression and will continue to do so. Our enemies hate this," he added.

The United States and the European Union have singled out the Guards as a target for sanctions amid accusations that the force is the driving force behind Iran's controversial nuclear programme.

Western governments suspect the programme is cover for a drive for a nuclear warhead, something Iran strongly denies.

Neither the United States nor Israel, which has the Middle East's sole if undeclared nuclear arsenal, have ruled out a resort to military action to prevent Iran developing an atomic bomb.

Washington has targeted the growing economic power of the Guards through unilateral sanctions for several years and is now spearheading efforts at the Security Council to secure agreement on a fourth round of UN sanctions that would target the force.

The Guards now permeate all sectors of Iranian society, with its engineering wing winning massive contracts.

On a visit to the Gulf in February, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said she feared Iran was moving "toward a military dictatorship," with enterprises controlled by the Revolutionary Guard "supplanting" the government.

"I fear the rise of the influence and power of the Revolutionary Guard... poses a very direct threat to everyone," she said.

earlier related report
Iran meets IAEA on nuclear fuel deal, but no breakthrough
Vienna (AFP) April 25, 2010 - Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki met with UN atomic watchdog chief Yukiya Amano in Vienna on Sunday, but there appeared to be no immediate breakthrough on a stalled nuclear fuel deal.

"A meeting was held between IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano and Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki on April 25 in Vienna," said International Atomic Energy Agency spokewoman, Gill Tudor.

"The Director General and the Minister discussed the issue of the provision of fuel for the Tehran Research Reactor and exchanged views on the possible modalities for its realisation," Tudor said, without providing more details.

"The meeting was held in a business-like atmosphere," Tudor added.

A source close to the negotiations told AFP that no deal was expected to be signed just yet.

"It's clear that no agreement is going to be signed today," the source said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

According to the Iranian news agency, IAEA chief Amano described the talks as "constructive," but said: "An agreement should not be expected to be signed today." The IAEA could not immediately confirm Amano's comments.

IRNA quoted Mottaki as saying that "we had friendly talks but diplomatic talks need time to reach results."

Separately, another Iranian news agency ISNA quoted Mottaki as telling Amano during their talks that "the fuel swap proposal is still on the table... this initiative has good potential for creating mutual confidence for all the sides, including Iran."

Under a deal brokered by IAEA last October, Iran was to have sent its stock of low-enriched uranium to Russia and France for conversion into fuel for a research reactor in Tehran.

But the proposal has hit a deadlock following Iran's insistence that the exchange of the fuel be simultaneous and take place within the borders of the Islamic republic.

On his arrival in Vienna earlier Sunday, Mottaki had said he was "optimistic" that talks could produce "acceptable results".

"We will have more decisive and technical talks with Amano regarding the swap. Given the circumstances, the IAEA and its director general can play a more constructive role. We believe the fuel swap can create multilateral trust," Mottaki said

Last week, Mottaki declared in Tehran that Iranian officials would hold talks with all 15 members of the UN Security Council regarding the fuel swap proposal.



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NUKEWARS
Ahmadinejad blasts Obama, seeks allies on sanctions
Kampala (AFP) April 24, 2010
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad warned Saturday the US leader would "suffer more" if new sanctions are imposed on Iran over its nuclear drive, as he sought Uganda's help to block UN action. Ahmadinejad ridiculed President Barack Obama as a "mask" and blasted his efforts to take a hard line with Tehran, which Washington and other Western powers fear is covertly trying to develop nuclear ... read more







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