Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Ahmadinejad speaks about 9/11, Israel

(CBS/AP) Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad delivered a rambling but relatively toned-down speech at the United Nations Wednesday in which he called the Sept. 11 terror attacks "tragic" but also said that humanity's lives would be "beautiful and pleasant" had U.S. forces not thrown Osama bin Laden's corpse into the sea.

Ahmadinejad, who in 2010 called the 9/11 attacks "a big lie," criticized the United States for "killing and throwing the culprit into the sea without trial or without informing the world and the people of America." He told the annual gathering of the U.N. General Assembly that the U.S. should have formed "an independent fact-finding team" to "make the general public aware of the truth behind the incident."

Known for past fiery denunciations of the United States and Israel, Ahmadinejad said that an illegitimate government represented the "Zionists," his preferred phrase for Israel. Yet at times he also seems to strike a conciliatory tone.

"I do not believe that Muslims, Christians, Jews, Hindus, Buddhists and others have any problems among themselves or are hostile against each other," Ahmadinejad said.

Ahmadinejad: "We have never threatened" Israel
Ahmadinejad on Assad aid: "They don't need us"
Iran overshadows Palestinian issue at U.N.

In an interview broadcast on "CBS This Morning" Wednesday, Ahmadinejad walked back from one of his previous inflammatory comments, that Israel should be "wiped off" the map.

"We have never threatened them," Ahmadinejad told CBS News.

(Watch at left)

"We say that occupation should be done away with," said Ahmadinejad. "Warlike behavior should be done away with. Terrorism should be done away with. The killing of women and children should be done away with. Has the Zionist regime done anything other than this during the last 65 years? No, they haven't."

On Syria, Ahmadinejad denied the recent public admission by Major Gen. Mohammad Ali Jafari, of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard, that Iranian forces are training 50,000 soldiers for President Bashar Assad's regime.

"I don't think 50,000 forces would even fit in Syria," Ahmadinejad told CBS News.

(Watch at left)

Instead, he said that Iran supports both the Assad regime and the opposition: "Certainly both parties are our friends. They are both people Syria. We love both parties."

Ahmadinejad's reputation prompted officials to urge him to take a less provocative tone in his speech. On Sunday, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon had met with Ahmadinejad and raised the potentially harmful consequences of inflammatory rhetoric "from various countries in the Middle East," U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky said.

But on Monday, Ahmadinejad took aim at both the U.S. and Israel while addressing a high-level U.N. meeting promoting the rule of law, accusing Washington of shielding what he called a nuclear-armed "fake regime." His remarks prompted a walkout by Israel's U.N. Ambassador Ron Prosor.

Ahmadinejad spoke Wednesday on Yom Kippur, the Jewish Day of Atonement and the holiest day on the religion's calendar. His appearance at the world body on the holy day irritated many Jewish New Yorkers, CBS New York station WCBS-TV reports.