US President George W. Bush on Monday called Iran the "single
biggest threat" to peace in the Middle East ahead of
a visit to the region centered on celebrations of Israel's
60th anniversary.
"To me it's the single biggest threat to peace in the
Middle East, the Iranian regime," because of its nuclear
programme and its support of groups like the Lebanese Hezbollah
militia, Bush told Israel's Channel 10.
"Their funding of Hezbollah -- look what's happening
in Lebanon now, a young democracy trying to survive,"
Bush said in excerpts of an interview to be broadcast in its
entirety on Tuesday.
In recent days Lebanon has been driven to the brink of civil
war after days of deadly sectarian street clashes between
the Shiite Hezbollah and its allies and Sunni Muslim supporters
of the US-backed government.
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"By the way it's in Israel's interest that the Lebanese
democracy survives. You need to be concerned about Iran and
you are concerned about Iran and so are we," Bush said.
The US and Israel accuse Iran of pursuing nuclear weapons
and Israel has considered the Islamic republic its greatest
strategic threat in the wake of repeated statements by its
president predicting the Jewish state's demise.
Iran insists its nuclear programme is entirely peaceful.
Bush was due to meet Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert on
Wednesday at the start of a five-day trip anchored on Israel's
60th anniversary celebrations and aimed at bolstering US-backed
Middle East peace talks launched in November.
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