[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 66 (Wednesday, May 5, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3158-S3159]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IRAN AT THE UNITED NATIONS
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, I read with interest, and disgust, the
press reports about the comments of Iranian President Ahmadinejad at
the United Nations on Monday, when he attempted to defend Iran's secret
nuclear program and his government's continuing defiance of the
Security Council.
I could not help but contrast his words with the efforts so many
other countries have been making to prevent a nuclear weapon from
ending up in the hands of a terrorist, or a nuclear arms race from
taking off in the Middle East or South Asia.
In the past couple of weeks, the United States and Russia--two former
enemies that once came to the brink of a nuclear war and since the
1980s have slashed their nuclear arsenals--agreed to make further
reductions, and President Obama has said he wants to negotiate deeper
cuts in furtherance of his long-term vision of a world without nuclear
weapons.
On Monday, the Pentagon disclosed publicly the number of weapons that
remain in our arsenal, which would have been unthinkable a few years
ago.
There are serious efforts being made to establish nuclear weapons-
free zones in South America, Africa, and the Middle East.
And at the United Nations, even countries such as Russia and China,
which have traditionally sided with Iran, have all but lost patience
with what Secretary Clinton rightly called Iran's ``history of making
confusing, contradictory and inaccurate statements.''
Nobody questions Iran's right to develop nuclear energy for peaceful
purposes. But the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty is, as United Nations
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has said, more important today than ever.
Terrorists like the Times Square bomber could cause death and
destruction on a scale we have not seen since World War II. Nuclear
weapons in the hands of terrorists would have consequences for life as
we know it that are almost unfathomable. And Iran has long been a state
sponsor of terrorism.
President Ahmadinejad insists there is no proof that Iran is building
a nuclear weapon, at the same time that he
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refuses to permit the kind of international inspections that could
establish whether Iran's nuclear program is only for peaceful purposes.
After Iran was offered the option of sending its enriched uranium to
Russia and France for refinement into fuel rods for its research
reactor, he responded by stalling with one contradictory counteroffer
after another, all the while continuing to enrich increasing amounts of
uranium to the point when Iran now is believed to have enough to build
two nuclear bombs.
Mr. President, I want to commend Secretary of State Clinton for her
measured, strong statements at the United Nations about Iran's
duplicitous, dangerous flaunting of the international nuclear control
regime. It does not appear that anything short of sweeping,
multilateral sanctions has a chance of convincing Iran's leaders to
change their reckless course.
It is tragic that Iran, a country of such talented, sophisticated
people--many of whom risked their lives to protest a blatantly
fraudulent election and who want peaceful relations with the United
States--currently has a President who is squandering Iran's resources
and reputation in pursuit of a narcissistic, foolhardy quest for a
nuclear bomb that will only increase his country's isolation and
intensify Iran's confrontational relationship with its neighbors and
the international community. The potential consequences could not be
more frightening for ordinary people everywhere, including the people
of Iran, and the Security Council should delay no further in imposing
the strongest possible sanctions.
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