Obama Responds to Ahmadinejad's 9/11 Statements
US President Barack Obama on Friday slammed Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for suggesting that the American government played a role in the September 11 attacks.
But Ahmadinejad refused to back down and called for a UN investigation into the “true” reasons for the 2001 Al-Qaeda attacks on the World Trade Center towers which left about 3,000.
“It was offensive, it was hateful,” Obama said of the comments, in an interview with the BBC’s Persian service which will be broadcast into Iran.
Obama said he was particularly shocked that Ahmadinejad made his speech in New York so close to the attack site Ground Zero.
He described the site as a place “where families lost their loved ones, people of all faiths, all ethnicities who see this as the seminal tragedy of this generation — for him to make a statement like that was inexcusable.”
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I find Obama’s participation in the 9/11 Cover-up offensive.
http://peaceoftheaction.org/2010/08/10/george-obama/
I like Ahmadinejad’s response to Obomba’s BS:
Ahmadinejad calls Obama reaction to 9/11 comments ‘insulting’, ‘amateurish’
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who recently accused the U.S. of involvement in the September 11, 2001 terror attacks, fired back at criticism waged against him saying Saturday that “the reaction [by U.S. President Barack Obama] was very amateurish … if there is nothing to hide, just present the relevant documents to the fact-finding team so that we can all together fight against the involved terrorists.”
Ahmadinejad told reporters upon his arrival in Tehran from New York that “I just raised one simple question and it is not right that whoever poses a question is insulted afterwards.”
The Iranian president said during his address before the United Nations General Assembly earlier this week that the September 11, 2001 terror attacks had been used against Muslims around the world, and used as a pretext for invading Afghanistan and Iraq.
“We should not allow this incident to be turned into another holy and untouchable issue,” Ahmadinejad said – a reference to the Holocaust, which the Iranian president considers a pretext for Israel’s occupation of Palestinian lands.
“The U.S. cannot raise a claim and issue a one-sided verdict, and based upon that, dictate its policies to other countries and accuse any state opposing the U.S. version of terrorism,” he added.
Ahmadinejad said during a news conference on Friday that his remarks at the General Assembly were not meant to hurt the feelings of Americans, but rather to show that the U.S. government had used the tragedy to kill “tens of thousands of people in Iraq and Afghanistan.”
Asked whether he should apologize for the remarks, Ahmadinejad shot back: “Why should the statements be perceived negatively? We have expressed our sympathies to those killed on September 11. We must now find the root causes.”
Nearly 3,000 people died on September 11, 2001, including more than 2,700 in New York City when two hijacked planes crashed into the World Trade Center.
Iran’s state television network said in a statement that there was a “media competition” between Ahmadinejad and Obama in New York, which “Ahmadinejad had clearly won, and that the interview with BBC Persian “could not save Obama.”
Since his arrival in the U.S. on Monday, Ahmadinejad held several exclusive interviews with the U.S. media, with the apparent aim of clarifying the Iranian stance to the American public.
Haaretz.com
Tehran raps Obama’s ‘offhand’ reaction
Tehran hits out at Washington for its inappropriate reaction to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s proposal to establish a tribunal to investigate the 9/11 incident.
“It has surprised everyone that American authorities have become concerned and shown an offhand reaction to the proposal to establish a tribunal to fairly and precisely look into the exact cause of the 9/11 incident,” Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast was quoted by IRNA as saying on Saturday.
In response to remarks made by US President Barack Obama on Friday, the Iranian spokesman said it is not clear why President Ahmadinejad’s proposal has enraged US officials.
“It has stunned intellectuals, scholars and researchers,” Mehmanparast added.
He said it is natural to conduct enough research into different events, especially those which can have a ‘major influence on international developments.’
“Some researchers and research centers have evidence which trigger serous uncertainty over the 9/11 incident and its perpetrators,” Mehmanparast underlined.
Such an important issue requires more serious research and consideration, he added.
He stressed that Ahmadinejad’s suggestion to set up of a truth-finding committee would help enlighten public opinion about the cause of the 9/11 incident and also set the stage for other ‘fair moves’ in the future.
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/143964.html