Aug 2, 2008
Tehran - Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Saturday that the
collapse of Israel and its Zionist regime was no longer an
unachievable aim.
'Today's situation is that neither the return of Palestinians
(refugees) nor formation of a Palestinian government and even the
collapse of the Zionist regime is an unachievable aim,' Ahmadinejad
said, according to Fars news agency.
'The Zionist regime has lost the philosophy of its existence and is no
longer capable of implementing the policies of the United States and
Europe in the region,' he told visiting Syrian President Bashar al-
Assad.
While referring to Syria's indirect talks with Iran's arch-foe Israel,
Ahmadinejad said that 'more joint harmonization could be effective to
continue bilateral ties on a suitable basis.'
'Some countries want to create distance between Iran and Syria but
they are making a mistake as the two countries will forever stay
beside each other,' Ahmadinejad said.
Fars quoted al-Assad as saying that Damascus would 'with seriousness'
continue expansion of ties with Tehran and 'there would be no changes
in bilateral relations.'
He further said Israel 'was not that strong' and that regional
countries could reach their aims through resistance.
Ahmadinejad and al-Assad discussed improved cooperation at the start
of a two-day summit in Tehran Saturday, state television network IRIB
reported.
The two presidents explored ways to strengthen and expand bilateral
and international cooperation 'as a means of maintaining regional
stability and security,' IRIB reported.
The two sides also voiced their readiness to increase annual trade
from the current 340 million to 640 million dollars.
In a commentary, IRIB TV called Assad's visit to Tehran a clear signal
to the West that, despite Syria's indirect talks with Israel, the
Tehran-Damascus alliance would continue to exist.
Assad is also to meet on Sunday with Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei.
Top of the agenda will be Syria's indirect talks, under Turkish
auspices, with Iran's arch-foe Israel, which has irritated Tehran.
Assad is expected to defend the talks in his meetings with Iranian
officials.
Also on the agenda will be the expansion of bilateral ties and Iran's
reassurance that its nuclear projects are only for peaceful purposes.
Israel and the US have urged Syria to end its alliance with Tehran and
its support for radical Palestinian factions and Lebanon's Hezbollah
opposition group.
Bilateral ties were cemented by a military cooperation agreement
signed in 2006.
Could we get that dude to run for US President?
_
/'_/)
,/_ /
/ /
/'_'/' '/'__'7,
/'/ / / /" /_\
('( ' /' ')
\ /
'\' _.7'
\ (
\ \
Up your ass mohammad - Elif air ab tizak!!!
in...@muslimmatch.com or apa...@muslimmatch.com or
politic...@googlegroups.com
jam...@islamsa.org.za
ds...@mweb.co.za
jami...@lantic.co.za
sanh...@sanha.org.za
sanh...@sanha.org.za
sanh...@sanha.org.za
help...@sanha.org.za
islamwa...@googlegroups.com
furti...@gmail.com
** Posted from http://www.teranews.com **