Iran's president said Thursday he was ready to hold talks over his country's 
nuclear program, but he warned that efforts to force Tehran to the negotiating 
table with threats could backfire. 
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad also launched a scathing attack on Israel and 
told more than 1,000 cheering Muslim students in the Indonesian capital that the 
West was being hypocritical in pressing Iran to stop its uranium enrichment 
program.
 
 
   Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad waves as 
 he arrives to pay respect at the Heroes Cemetery, where Indonesian 
 soldiers are buried Thursday May 11, 2006 in Jakarta, Indonesia. Iran's 
 president said Thursday he was ready to negotiate with the United States 
 and its allies over his country's nuclear program but he also suggested 
 that any threats against Tehran would make the dialogue more difficult. 
 [AP] | 
"The big powers ... have a lot of nuclear weapons in their warehouse," 
Ahmadinejad said during a visit to the world's largest Muslim majority nation 
amid a deepening international standoff over Tehran's nuclear program and 
suspicions it is seeking atomic weapons.
"We want to use technology for peace and the welfare of the Muslim people 
around the world," he told students who gathered at Islamic University on 
Jakarta's southern outskirts. "But they want to use it to invade other 
countries. This is the difference between us and them."
Ahmadinejad, known for his fiery rhetoric, has become a pariah in the West.
But he received a warm welcome in Indonesia, where his willingness to 
criticize the U.S.-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan — seen by many here as 
attacks on Islam — his outspoken criticism of Israel, and his refusal to stand 
down to international pressure on the nuclear dispute resonates with many of its 
young people.
"I think you are the man of the year," one student stood to say. "We will 
always be with you. You will never walk alone," said another.
Key U.N. Security Council members agreed Tuesday to postpone a resolution 
that would have delivered an ultimatum to Tehran, giving Iran another two weeks 
to reevaluate its insistence on developing its uranium enrichment capabilities.
The Chinese and Russians have balked at British, French and U.S. efforts to 
put the resolution under Chapter 7 of the U.N. Charter. Such a move would 
declare Iran a threat to international peace and security and set the stage for 
further measures if Tehran refuses to suspend its uranium enrichment operations. 
Those measures could range from breaking diplomatic relations to economic 
sanctions and military action.
The Iranian leader brushed off the threat, saying in an interview with Metro 
TV that the West had more to lose than Tehran did if it was internationally 
isolated. Sanctions would serve only to "motivate" Iran's nuclear scientists, he 
said.
Asked what it would take to begin talks to resolve the standoff, Ahmadinejad 
told the station Iran was "ready to engage in dialogue with anybody."
"But if someone points a weapon at your face and says you must speak, will 
you do that?"
Ahmadinejad also continued his verbal attacks on Israel — last year he said 
the Jewish state should be "wiped off the map" and questioned whether the 
Holocaust was a myth — calling it a "a tyrannical regime that one day will be 
destroyed."
He repeated earlier allegations that European countries were driven by 
anti-Semitism when they decided after the Holocaust to establish a Jewish state 
in the midst of Muslim countries. They wanted the Jews out of their own 
backyard, he said, and by surrounding them with their enemies paved the way for 
their ultimate destruction.
Israeli officials — who have described Iran's nuclear quest as the Jewish 
state's greatest threat — had no immediate comment on Ahmadinejad's latest 
remarks, said Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Mark Regev.
Indonesia has cordial relations with Iran, supporting its right to pursue 
nuclear technology for peaceful means. Like Tehran — which recently announced 
plans to invest $600 million in the Southeast Asian nation's oil and gas sector, 
a much-needed cash infusion — Jakarta also refuses to recognize Israel.
But President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono also enjoys good ties with the United 
States, which considers him a close ally in the war on terror. He offered this 
week to mediate the nuclear dispute.
The students who crammed into the auditorium at the Islamic University — 
where U.S. envoy Karen Hughes received a grilling last year over U.S. foreign 
policy in the Middle East — were enthusiastic supporters of the Ahmadinejad, 
clapping and cheering throughout his 90-minute speech. 
He told the crowd every country should have the right to new technology to 
meet energy needs. 
"If nuclear technology is such a bad thing, why do you (Western countries) 
have it?" Ahmadinejad said, drawing more applause. 
He got the same response earlier in the day when he addressed a crowd of 
about 300 at the University of Indonesia, where students held signs saying "Iran 
in our Hearts," and "Nuclear for Peace." 
"I loved him, he was very charismatic," said a first-year economics student 
who identified herself as Deslina. "If it comes to that, they should go to war. 
If I could, I would fight the United States."