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Ahmadinejad offers Bush TV debate
Tuesday 29 August 2006, 18:56 Makka Time, 15:56 GMT
The Iranian president has challenged his US counterpart to a live television debate.
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad made the offer to George Bush on Tuesday. Thursday is the
deadline set by the UN Security Council for Iran to suspend all uranium
enrichment and reprocessing activities, and Iran faces possible sanctions if it
fails to comply.
Ahmadinejad said: "I suggest we talk with Mr Bush, the president of the United
States, in a live television debate about world issues and ways out of these
standoffs.
"We would voice our opinions and they would too. The debate should be
uncensored, above all for the American public."
The White House called the suggestion a "diversion" from the Thursday deadline
and refused the invitation.
Dana Perino, the White House spokeswoman, said: "Talk of a debate is just a
diversion from the legitimate concerns that the international community, not
just the US, has about Iran's behaviour, from support for terrorism to pursuit
of a nuclear weapons capability."
Overtures
Earlier this year Ahmadinejad sent Bush a letter, the first contact in decades
between leaders of the two countries.
But the Iranian president said that such a debate
would not necessarily mean reopening dialogue with the United States, which
froze diplomatic relations with Iran after the seizure of its embassy in Tehran
in 1979.
Ahmadinejad said: "Debate is different from
dialogue, dialogue has other conditions, we have said our position on that
before."
But he said that dialogue was also possible with
"the ones who show a frown to our nations if the conditions are fulfilled".
Sanctions
The Vienna-based International Atomic Energy
Agency is to report to the Security Council, also on Thursday, on Iran's
compliance with its demands.
Iran has said repeatedly that it has no intention
of abandoning its nuclear work, which it says is for civilian energy purposes
only.
Ahmadinejad said he believed that it was
"unlikely" the Security Council would act against Iran over its nuclear
programme, which the United States sees as a cover for weapons development.
John Bolton, the American ambassador to the UN,
has said the United States plans to put forward a draft resolution imposing
penalties such as a travel ban and asset freeze for key Iranian leaders soon
after the deadline.
Ahmadinejad said: "Sanctions are not an issue ...
We will not be happy if they use anything but logic but we are not worried.
After all, we are capable of defending our rights."
The Iranian president caused controversy last year
when he described Israel as a tumour that should be "wiped off the map" and said
he wanted the root of tensions in the Middle East to be "removed".
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©-free 2006 Adelaide Institute