Chirac threatens nuke attacks on 'terrorist' states (AFP) Updated: 2006-01-20 09:17 In an apparent reference to Iran, Chirac condemned "the temptation by certain
countries to obtain nuclear capabilities in contravention of treaties."
Iran's government is pursuing a nuclear development programme, stoking fears
among major powers that it will be used to make nuclear weapons.
France's opposition parties were split in their reaction to Chirac's
statements.
The Socialist Party, through one-time prime minister Laurent Fabius, said
there was nothing shocking about the position put forward.
But Helene Luc, a senator with the smaller Communist Party and member of a
defence committee, said: "This extension of the concept of nuclear dissuasion
takes us back years to the Cold War and can only deepen tensions with countries
that aspire to have such weapons."
The comments also raised heckles in Germany, from both opposition and ruling
coalition parties and the press, although there was no official comment from the
coalition government led by Conservative Angela Merkel.
French President Jacques Chirac delivers his
speech after visiting the French nuclear submarine the Vigilant in l'Ile
Longue, Western France, Thursday Jan. 19,
2006.[AP] | For the opposition, Green deputy
Winfried Nachtwei said Chirac's comments were "totally adventurous" and
"irresponsible".
"I fear that these comments will not help the international community achieve
the highest level of solidarity," Andreas Schockenhoff, the deputy president of
Merkel's parliamentary party, said in an interview with the Friday edition of
the regional daily Koelner Stadtanzeiger.
The comments were also widely criticized in German newspapers' with
editorialists saying they risked intensifying the nuclear standoff with Iran.
Chirac's comment's are "clearly counterproductive," the economic daily
Handelsblatt said.
"Chirac's threat is not only unwise, but also counterproductive," the
Westdeutsche Zeitung in Duesseldorf said. "Because it leads to believe that
diplomatic means are very limited in the face of nuclear
ambitions."
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