PARIS/TEHRAN, 27 October 2005 — Iranian President Muhammad Ahmadinejad’s call for Israel to be “wiped off the map” triggered widespread outrage yesterday and prompted Israel to describe the regime in Tehran as “a clear and present danger.”
“We believe that Iran is trying to buy time ... so it can develop a nuclear bomb,” said Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom in Jerusalem. “Iran is a clear and present danger,” he said at a joint press conference in Jerusalem with visiting Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.
In Washington, the White House said the words of the hard-line Iranian president also underlined US concerns about Tehran’s nuclear ambitions. “It just reconfirms what we have been saying about the regime in Iran. It underscores the concerns we have about Iran’s nuclear operations,” spokesman Scott McClellan told reporters.
France will summon Iran’s ambassador to Paris to question him over Ahmadinejad’s call,” Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy said. “I learned of the comments ... according to which the president of Iran says he wants Israel to disappear and said the conflict in the Middle East would perpetuate an age-old fight between Jews and Muslims,” Douste-Blazy said in a statement.
Ahmadinejad made the comments at a conference in Tehran entitled “The World without Zionism.” “As the Imam said, Israel must be wiped off the map,” he said in a reference to Iran’s late revolutionary leader Ayatollah Khomeini. His comments were the first time in years that such a high-ranking Iranian official had called for Israel’s eradication, even though such slogans are still regularly used at regime rallies.
In Berlin, the German government said the comments were “completely unacceptable.” “If these comments were in fact made, they are completely unacceptable and should be condemned in the strongest terms,” said Foreign Ministry spokesman Walter Lindner.
In his speech Ahmadinejad said Israel’s establishment was “a move by the world oppressor against the Islamic world.” In Jerusalem, Shalom said Tehran had consistently shown its desire to wipe out Israel. “This kind of regime is very, very extreme and it would be a nightmare for all the international community if they had a nuclear bomb. We believe that the time has come to move the Iranian file to the (UN) Security Council and the sooner the better,” he said in remarks to reporters.
But the Russian foreign minister differed, saying Moscow had no substantial evidence that “we have a clear and present danger” from Iran’s nuclear program.