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United Nation Last Updated: Feb 18th, 2008 - 14:39:01


US, Iran showdown at UN
By Middle East Online
Sep 19, 2006, 08:59

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Middle East Online UNITED NATIONS - Presidents George W. Bush of the United States and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran take their nuclear dispute to the world stage on Tuesday when both give speeches to the UN General Assembly.

Bush and Ahmadinejad will be among keynote speakers on the first day of debate by global leaders at the General Assembly -- the last for UN Secretary General Kofi Annan who stands down at the end of the year.

The dispute over whether Iran is seeking nuclear weapons has become one of the main sources of international tension in recent months, along with the wars in Lebanon and Iraq and the Darfur conflict in Sudan.

Annan will open the debate with his final speech at the general assembly.

The US president will be one of the first speakers. He is expected to use his speech to defend the US push for sanctions against Iran over its nuclear weapons.

Bush was also expected to defend US action in Iraq and hail the US administration's efforts to spread democracy in the Middle East as an antidote to the resentments that fuel terrorism.

The Iranian leader, who has repeatedly condemned US attempts to halt his country's nuclear programme, will be one of the final speakers on the first day.

Speaking in Caracas before leaving for New York, Ahmadinejad on Monday again rejected international pressure to suspend unranium enrichment -- a key stage in the production of a nuclear bomb.

Talks "are continuing, and I see no reason to speed them up," he told a press conference.

"Iran's nuclear program is very clear and very transparent," the president said. "We have always said that we are willing to negotiate with any country."

If nuclear energy "is something good then everyone should have it, and if it is bad then nobody should have it," he said at the end of his two-day visit.

Ahmadinejad accused Western powers of wanting to control nuclear technology "and when another country needs it they sell it at a high price."

According to diplomats, however, there are signs that Iran is ready to suspend its programme, at least temporarily.

Efforts to counter Iran's programme will be discussed later in the day when the foreign ministers of Britain, China, France, Germany, Italy, Russia and the United States hold a working dinner on the nuclear dispute.

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