Iran warns neighbours over US presence in the Gulf
Friday, 12 March 2010
TEHRAN, Mar 11 (Reuters): Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad warned Gulf countries on Thursday against the US presence in the region, saying Washington aimed to dominate their energy resources in the name of fighting terrorism.
Iran opposes the U.S. military presence on its borders in Iraq, Afghanistan and the Gulf, saying western military intervention is the root of insecurity in the region.
"We warn the countries in the region over the presence of bullying powers ... they have not come here to restore security or to counter drug trafficking," Ahmadinejad said in a speech during a visit to the southern province of Hormuzgan.
The hardline president accused the West of planning to dominate energy resources in the Gulf and said: "People in the region will cut off their hands from the Persian Gulf's oil."
Tension between Iran and the West has risen over the Islamic state's nuclear program, with Western powers calling for a fourth round of U.N. sanctions over Tehran's refusal to halt uranium enrichment.
The West suspects Iran is seeking nuclear weapons. Tehran says it plans only civilian nuclear facilities.
Washington and its western allies say they want a diplomatic solution but have not ruled out military action against the Islamic republic.
"Iran's message to the countries in the region is nothing but the message of friendship and brotherhood," Ahmadinejad told a crowd in the provincial capital, Bandar Abbas.
The United States said in January it had expanded missile defense systems in and around the Gulf -- a waterway crucial for global oil supplies -- to counter what it sees as Iran's growing missile threat.
Iran condemned the move and accused Washington of seeking to stoke "Iran-phobia."
Ahmadinejad questioned the reasons behind sending troops to Afghanistan after the attack on the New York's World Trade Center in September 2001 and said: "They sent troops to Afghanistan under the name of fight against terrorism and drug trafficking.
Iran opposes the U.S. military presence on its borders in Iraq, Afghanistan and the Gulf, saying western military intervention is the root of insecurity in the region.
"We warn the countries in the region over the presence of bullying powers ... they have not come here to restore security or to counter drug trafficking," Ahmadinejad said in a speech during a visit to the southern province of Hormuzgan.
The hardline president accused the West of planning to dominate energy resources in the Gulf and said: "People in the region will cut off their hands from the Persian Gulf's oil."
Tension between Iran and the West has risen over the Islamic state's nuclear program, with Western powers calling for a fourth round of U.N. sanctions over Tehran's refusal to halt uranium enrichment.
The West suspects Iran is seeking nuclear weapons. Tehran says it plans only civilian nuclear facilities.
Washington and its western allies say they want a diplomatic solution but have not ruled out military action against the Islamic republic.
"Iran's message to the countries in the region is nothing but the message of friendship and brotherhood," Ahmadinejad told a crowd in the provincial capital, Bandar Abbas.
The United States said in January it had expanded missile defense systems in and around the Gulf -- a waterway crucial for global oil supplies -- to counter what it sees as Iran's growing missile threat.
Iran condemned the move and accused Washington of seeking to stoke "Iran-phobia."
Ahmadinejad questioned the reasons behind sending troops to Afghanistan after the attack on the New York's World Trade Center in September 2001 and said: "They sent troops to Afghanistan under the name of fight against terrorism and drug trafficking.