Published on 12:00 AM, February 17, 2021

Iran renews pledge against nukes after controversy

Iran has reiterated that its opposition to nuclear weapons was  official policy as laid down by its supreme leader Ayatollah Ali  Khamenei, in the wake of controversial remarks by a minister. 

"Iran's  position remains unchanged. Iran's nuclear activities have always been  peaceful and will remain peaceful," foreign ministry spokesman Saeed  Khatibzadeh told a news conference.

"The supreme leader's  fatwa banning weapons of mass destruction and nuclear weapons is still  valid," he added, referring to Khamenei's religious edict.

The  renewed pledge came a week after Intelligence Minister Mahmoud Alavi  said it would not be Tehran's fault if the country was ever "pushed"  towards developing a nuclear bomb.

He stressed that "under normal circumstances, Iran has no such intention or plan".

Iranian intelligence ministers can only be appointed or dismissed with the approval of the supreme leader.

Iran  had claimed the existence of the fatwa for years before making the text  public for the first time in 2010, at a time of crisis over Iran's  nuclear programme.

Tehran was at the time accused by the  international community, especially the West and Israel, of seeking to  secretly acquire the atomic bomb.

The fatwa declares the  use of the atomic bomb and other weapons of mass destruction to be  "haram", or forbidden by Islam, and it is regularly cited by Iranian  authorities as a guarantee of Tehran's good intentions.

Tasnim  news agency, considered close to Iran's ultraconservatives, has blasted  Alavi over his "astonishing remarks" that could have "very serious  consequences".

It said in an editorial that the leader's  fatwa was not designed just to "appease" the West but showed that an  atomic bomb would go against "the nature of the Islamic republic". 

"These remarks are completely against national interests as they can strengthen the West's leverage in negotiations and more importantly, give credence to the America's unjust" stance against Iran, Tasnim said.