Washington will call for "even stricter sanctions on Iran to try to change the behavior of the regime," U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in a TV interview broadcast in Venezuela.
Washington will call for "even stricter sanctions on Iran to try to change the behavior of the regime," U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in a TV interview broadcast in Venezuela.

The U.S. remains concerned about what Clinton called Iran's "pursuit of nuclear weapons," which could "be very destabilizing in the Middle East and beyond," she told private television network Globovision.

Tehran insists its nuclear program is for peaceful, civilian energy purposes.

"We would ask the world to join us in imposing even stricter sanctions on Iran to try to change the behavior of the regime," Clinton said in the interview, which was broadcast late Tuesday.

Noting the unrest in the country since the disputed June presidential election, Clinton said: "We have seen in the last weeks that Iran has not respected its own democracy.

"It has taken actions against his own citizens for peacefully protesting," she said, referring to the mass demonstrations in response to the re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

The victory for the hard-line incumbent, who is backed by supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, sparked fraud allegations from two of his rival candidates: ex-Prime Minister Mir Hossein Mousavi and reformist Mehdi Karroubi.

"I think it is not a very smart position to ally with a regime that is being rejected by so many of their own people," Clinton said in the interview.

The administration of U.S. President Barack Obama, Clinton added, thinks "it is not in the best interest" of the world to be doing business with Iran that would "promote the regime...That is not smart."

Clinton also expressed concern at the political and economic alliance between Venezuela and Iran.

The South American country's strongman leader, Hugo Chavez, is Iran's main ally in the region. Chavez has defended Ahmadinejad numerous times in recent weeks.

"We call on the world to respect Iran because there are attempts to undermine the strength of the Iranian revolution," Chavez said in his weekly radio and television address last month after the election.

Iran dominated talks between Obama and Russian leaders Tuesday, with White House officials noting Moscow now seemed more receptive to U.S. arguments.

U.S. Deputy National Security Advisor Denis McDonough said Obama was "struck by the candor with which President (Dmitry) Medvedev has underscored his concern about the growing threat from Iran."

While Tehran insists its nuclear program is strictly for energy production, the U.S. has long voiced fears it could be used to manufacture an atomic bomb.

Iran - whose president has called for Israel to be wiped from the map - also possesses missiles capable of reaching targets throughout the Middle East that could be fitted with nuclear warheads if Tehran possessed them.

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