Ahmadinejad: Holocaust is West's Achilles heel
Iran's president accuses West of using Holocaust to justify oppression, announces boosting uranium enrichment.
By DPA and The Associated Press Tags: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Iran Israel newsIranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Thursday told a radio program in Tehran that "the Holocaust is the West's Achilles heel and its biggest weakness," Israel Radio reported.
"We will never surrender to bullying powers, and those who think that we might make any compromise and give in to Western pressures and psychological war are badly mistaken," Ahmadinejad said.
Ahmadinejad is being harshly criticized by his three rivals in the June 12 presidential election - Mir-Hossein Moussavi, Mehdi Karroubi and Mohsen Rezaei - for having pushed Iran toward renewed international isolation with what they have called his "adventurous" foreign policies.
The three candidates especially blame Ahmadinejad for his uncompromising stance in the dispute over Iran's nuclear programs and the president's tirades against Israel and questioning the Holocaust during World War II.
"The West has taken the issue of the Holocaust to expose a hypocritical innocence and oppress other nations, but I have effectively attacked this weak point of the West," Ahmadinejad countered. "Where is the adventurism in this policy?"
Remarks by Ahmadinejad such as eradicating Israel from the Middle East, relocating the Jewish state to Europe and the United States and questioning the historic dimensions of the Holocaust caused widespread international condemnation.
Ahmadinejad, who is seeking a second four-year term in next month's vote, also rejected any compromise with world powers in the nuclear dispute.
Meanwhile Thursday, Ahmadinejad also announced that Iran has boosted its capacity to enrich uranium, another sign of anti-Western defiance by the leader seeking re-election in a vote next month.
Ahmadinejad said last month that Iran had 7,000 centrifuges at its uranium enrichment facility in Natanz in central Iran. The figure marked a significant boost from the 6,000 centrifuges announced in February. In his latest comments, reported by the state-run Islamic Republic News Agency, he did not give a specific new figure.
"Now we have more than 7,000 centrifuges and the West dare not threaten us," IRNA quoted Ahmadinejad as saying on a small radio station late Wednesday.
Ahmadinejad has made Iran's expanding nuclear program one of the enterpieces of his campaign and has struck an increasingly harsh tone against the United States and other countries calling for Iran to halt it uranium enrichment.
Iran's leaders say they will never give up nuclear technology and insist they seek only energy-producing reactors. The United States, Israel and other nations worry that Iran's enrichment facilities could eventually produce material for nuclear warheads.
There is broad consensus among Iranian voters on the nation's rights for a nuclear program. But Ahmadinejad's three challengers - a fellow hard-liner and two moderates - have questioned his uncompromising stances against the West and their offers of economic incentives in exchange for suspending uranium enrichment.
The centrifuges spin at supersonic speeds to remove impurities from uranium gas, which then goes through other steps to become nuclear fuel or, at higher enrichment levels, nuclear weapons material.
Earlier this year, Iran said it was using an upgraded centrifuge that produces enriched uranium at about double the rate of its original systems.
Currently, Iran is only capable of slowly producing enriched uranium for reactors. But Iranian officials have said their long-term goal is for more than 50,000 centrifuges, which would give it the ability to produce high-grade nuclear material in a start-to-finish cycle of just weeks.
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