Israel denies Olmert comments on Iran missile raid
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's office denied on Saturday he had told a German magazine Iran's disputed nuclear program could be severely hit by firing 1,000 cruise missiles in a 10-day attack.
Weekly news magazine Focus said its reporter, Amir Taheri, asked Olmert in an interview whether military action would be an option if Iran continued to defy the United Nations. It quoted Olmert as responding: "Nobody is ruling it out."
"It is impossible perhaps to destroy the entire nuclear program but it would be possible to damage it in such a way that it would be set back years," Focus quoted Olmert as saying. "It would take 10 days and would involve the firing of 1,000 Tomahawk cruise missiles," it quoted him as saying.
Olmert's spokeswoman, Miri Eisin, said the prime minister had spoken to the author of the Focus article, but she said Olmert did not make the comments that were attributed to him.
Eisin said the meeting was not an interview and was conducted for background purposes, on the understanding it would not be used.
"The prime minister did not say these things," Eisin said.
Ulrich Schmidla, a foreign affairs editor at Focus magazine, said they stood by the interview. Taheri, a freelance reporter, was a regular contributor to Focus, he added.
Iran says it is developing nuclear technology for power generation, but the West fears it is trying to build a bomb and two sets of U.N. sanctions have been imposed on Tehran.
Alaeddin Broujerdi, head of Iran's parliament national security and foreign policy commission, dismissed Olmert's reported comments. Continued...






