Iran on Sunday brushed aside what it called a U.S. "psychological war" 
against its nuclear programme after a published report described Pentagon 
planning for possible military strikes against Iranian atomic facilities. 
 
 
 |  Iranian protesters 
 chant anti-U.S. slogans as they hold pictures of Iran's late leader 
 Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini (L) and Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei 
 during a protest against negotiation with the U.S. in front of the Iran 
 Supreme National Security Council's building in Tehran, Iran April 8, 
 2006. [Reuters]
 | 
A report by influential investigative journalist Seymour Hersh in The New 
Yorker magazine, citing unnamed current and former officials, said Washington 
has stepped up plans for possible attacks on Iranian facilities to curb its 
atomic work. 
The article said the United States was considering using tactical nuclear 
weapons to destroy Iran's underground uranium enrichment facilities at Natanz, 
south of Tehran. 
"This is a psychological war launched by Americans because they feel angry 
and desperate regarding Iran's nuclear dossier," Foreign Ministry spokesman 
Hamid Reza Asefi told a weekly news conference. 
"We will stand by our right to nuclear technology. It is our red line. We are 
ready to deal with any possible scenario. Iran is not afraid of threatening 
language," he added. 
The United Nations has called on Iran to halt uranium enrichment, which the 
West believes Iran is pursuing to acquire technology to make a nuclear bomb. 
Iran has rejected the demand and insists it only wants to make fuel for civilian 
uses. 
Iran's decision in January to resume enrichment prompted Britain, France and 
Germany to break off 2-1/2 years of EU talks with Tehran and back a U.S. demand 
to refer Iran to the U.N. Security Council, which can impose sanctions. 
Asefi said Iran was ready to continue its cooperation with the International 
Atomic Energy Agency and said IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei would visit Iran by 
Friday to discuss Iran's cooperation with the IAEA. 
"We have always had good cooperation with the IAEA and we will continue to do 
so," he said. 
ElBaradei is expected to provide a report to the Council on Iran's nuclear 
programme entitled "the process of Iranian compliance" at the end of this month. 
ElBaradei has said he has found no proof of a weapons programme in Iran but 
at the same time has said he cannot give the Islamic Republic a clean bill of 
health. 
An IAEA official has said earlier that ElBaradei would travel to Iran on 
Tuesday or Wednesday for a day of meetings in Tehran to try to win more 
cooperation from Tehran. 
(China Daily 04/10/2006 page1)