Posted by
InchDeep on Wednesday, July 09, 2008 12:54:27 PM
Iran just test fired 9, count them, 9 test missiles. Obama wants Diplomats to fix it, McCain wants missile defense. Who do you trust to protect you. The article mentions Obama wants tougher action taken towards Iran, but that is poll driven flip flop on his part. Don't believe me, here you go you Obama tools.
Here is the article
from the Guardian.
Iran sends missile test warning
The US Democratic presidential candidate, Barack Obama, called
for tighter sanctions on Iran today after it fired nine test missiles
that were capable of hitting American and Israeli bases.
"Iran is
a great threat. We have to make sure we are working with our allies to
apply tightened pressure on Iran," the Illinois senator said.
Iran
demonstrated its military force with the test-flight of nine long and
medium-range missiles in the strategic Strait of Hormouz, through which
40% of the world's oil passes.
Tehran said the exercise was in
retaliation to threats from the US and Israel over its disputed nuclear
projects, which it claims are civilian.
Obama said if he were to
be elected president, he would combine more direct diplomacy with the
threat of much tougher economic sanctions.
"I think what this
underscores is the need for us to create a kind of policy that is
putting the burden on Iran to change behaviour, and frankly we just
have not been able to do that over the last several years," Obama said.
He
cited reports that US exports to Iran have increased under George Bush,
even as the administration has toughened its rhetoric.
Earlier,
the US secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice, said the "war games"
justified America's defence plans with bases in eastern Europe. She
said the tests were "evidence that the missile threat is not an
imaginary one."
"Those who say there is no Iranian missile threat
against which we should build a missile defence system perhaps ought to
talk to the Iranians about their claims."
Her comments were
backed by the Republican presidential candidate, John McCain. He said
the tests "demonstrate the need for effective missile defence now and
in the future, and this includes missile defence in Europe as is
planned with the Czech Republic and Poland". These plans are strongly
opposed by Russia.
But the Kremlin, which has resisted US calls
for tougher UN sanctions on Iran, said it shared concerns about
Tehran's nuclear programme.
Speaking from Japan, where Bush
attended the G8 summit, the White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe said
the Iranians should "refrain from further missile tests if they truly
seek to gain the trust of the world".
"The Iranian regime only
furthers the isolation of the Iranian people from the international
community when it engages in this sort of activity," he said.
Washington
said Iran's development of ballistic missiles violated UN security
council resolutions. But it added that the US was committed to pursuing
a diplomatic solution to the impasse over Iran's nuclear ambitions.
The
practice shots by Iran's elite revolutionary guards were another in a
series of conflicting messages coming out of the country over its
nuclear programme and relations with the US and Israel.
General
Hossein Salami, the guards' navy commander, told state television today
that the test missiles exercise, called "The Great Prophet 3", would
"demonstrate our resolve and might against enemies who in recent weeks
have threatened Iran with harsh language".
An Iranian news agency quoted Salami as saying: "Our hands are always on the trigger and our missiles are ready for launch."
But
less than a day ago, the Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
dismissed fears that Israel and the United States could be preparing to
attack his country, calling the possibility a "funny joke".
At a
press conference during a visit to Malaysia yesterday, Ahmadinejad
said: "I assure you that there won't be any war in the future."
The
G8 expressed "serious concern" over the risks posed by Iran's nuclear
programme and urged Tehran to suspend all uranium enrichment-related
activities.
"We call on Iran to respond to the updated incentives
package in a constructive manner," a G8 statement said today. "We also
urge Iran to act in a more responsible and constructive manner in the
region, particularly in the context of the Middle East peace process
and the stability of Iraq and Afghanistan."
Television reports
said the missiles fired included a new version of the Shahab-3 missile,
which officials have said has a range of 1,250 miles and is equipped
with a conventional warhead weighing a tonne.
Such a missile could reach Israel, Turkey, Afghanistan or Pakistan.
Israel's military has also flexed its muscles in recent months as
tensions with Iran have risen, sending warplanes over the eastern
Mediterranean in June.
US
officials described that incident as a possible rehearsal for a strike
on Iran's nuclear programme, which the west fears is aimed at producing
atomic weapons.
Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev today said Israel "does not desire hostility and conflict with Iran".
"But
it is clear that the Iranian nuclear programme and the Iranian
ballistic missile programme is a matter of grave concern," he said.
Iran says its nuclear programme is geared only towards generating electricity, not producing weapons.
Last
month, six major world powers offered a package of economic incentives
to Iran if it halted nuclear activities. Tehran's response to that
offer has not been made public.
For months, Ahmadinejad and other
Iranian officials have played down the possibility of a US attack
because they think difficulties in Iraq and domestic worries will deter
America from engaging in another war.
At the same time, Tehran
has stepped up its warnings of retaliation if the Americans - or
Israelis - do attack, including threats to hit Israel and US Gulf bases
with missiles and stop oil traffic through the vital Gulf region.