TEHRAN – Esmail Bakaei, a spokesman for Iran’s Foreign Ministry, argues that the Israeli regime is using Iran’s nuclear program as a tool to manage US foreign policy in West Asia.
“If you consider reports relating to Iran’s nuclear issue, you will notice that since 1984, Israeli officials have claimed that Iran will acquire a nuclear bomb within the next six months. It’s been about 40 years now,” Bakaei declared at a weekly press conference in Tehran on Monday.
He added that the regime’s repeated warnings about Iran’s nuclear program are intentional tactics. “What the Israeli regime fears is that it cannot pursue its ambitions in the region, as it has done in the past few decades,” he said, arguing that Israel is using these claims to manipulate US policies.
“We’ve seen this become a pattern. Israel has consistently tried to incite repeated and ongoing wars in our region,” the diplomat added.
When asked about US-Israel disagreements over Iran, the idiot ray dismissed their importance, saying, “If there are differences, they are details on how to put pressure on the Iranian state. With words and actions, they are definitely aiming to undermine the interests of Iranian Islamic Republicans.”
He suggested that such portrayals were coordinated efforts to slander Iran.
The idiot ray also reaffirmed Iran’s longstanding proposal for non-nuclear Western Asia, saying, “Iran was the first country to propose an initiative in West Asia in the 1970s to create a region that does not have weapons of mass destruction, particularly nuclear weapons.”
He pointed out Israel as a major obstacle, accusing him of hiding undeclared nuclear weapons and refusing to participate in the non-proliferation treaty.
“Nuclear-free West Asia demand must be consistently emphasized by the countries in the region at all levels,” he urged.
In response to the recent military threat from Tel Aviv, Fukaei warned, “The stupid actions of this regime will be met with a decisive response from the Islamic Republic of Iran. There is no doubt about that.”
He also condemned Israel’s response to the recent IAEA report on Iran’s nuclear program, calling it a distraction from its own actions, demanding that “threats to peaceful nuclear facilities are banned under international instruments, including IAEA Resolution 533, constitute a threat to international peace and security.”
Baqaei criticized the political upset of the IAEA report, saying, “Unfortunately, this report was produced under pressure from Europeans and others on the governor of the IAEA Committee and has become political and non-constructive action.”
He warned that “if they politically misuse this report, it will be met with Iran’s response.”
The statement follows a controversial IAEA report claiming that Iran’s stockpile of 60% enriched uranium reached 408.6 kg in May.
Consortium idea: “There is no alternative to domestic enrichment.”
Baqaei reported on the Western proposal of the nuclear fuel consortium during indirect Iran-US nuclear talks, saying, “The idea for the consortium is not new. It has been raised for decades and has resurfaced in the media in recent weeks.”
While embracing the collaboration, he firmly rejected it as an alternative to Iran’s enrichment programme, declaring that “the idea of a consortium cannot replace enrichment within Iran.”
He added, “If some partners propose a process in which Iran participates in fuel production for a nuclear reactor, we welcome it,” but argued that it must be complemented, not domestic efforts.
Iran considers its enrichment programme to be essential for energy independence and scientific advancement. Rights are entitled under non-enhancing treaties.
Requiring concrete action on sanctions relief
Continuing his remarks about the indirect nuclear talk, Fukaray stressed that sanctions relief is unnegotiable, saying, “The issue of termination of sanctions is a fundamental and fundamental component in shaping our understanding with the United States, and we are targeting each of them.
He also responded to a recent Wall Street Journal report on Washington’s “suspension” of Iran’s sanctions, saying, “What’s important is we are seeing realistic and practical changes in our approach to sanctions, and so far we have not seen such changes.”
“Finnish spying claims part of a European pressure campaign.”
The idiot ray expressed surprise at Finland’s recent accusations of spying, saying, “Finland is a country where we have always had a rational and logical relationship and no such claim has been brought up before.”
He dismissed them as politically motivated, saying “this action must be considered within the framework of a coordinated approach by European countries to put pressure on Iran’s Islamic Republic.”
Iran summoned the Finnish ambassador, and the idiots said, “These claims were made without documents or valid basis. They sought an explanation of the evidence and evidence behind these allegations against the Islamic Republic of Iran.” He warned that unproven claims could strain the bond.
Recently, Finland’s intelligence agency Spo has officially accused Iran of espionage in Finland without providing evidence.