Iranian President Wins Syrian Support on Atomic Row By Reuters January 19, 2006 The New York Times Original Source: http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/international/international-syria-iran.html DAMASCUS (Reuters) - Syria said on Thursday Iran had a right to acquire nuclear technology for peaceful means and demanded Israel be stripped of its suspected nuclear arsenal. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad held talks with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad at the start of a two-day visit to Damascus, his first since he took office in August. Syria and Iran both risk showdowns with the U.N. Security Council -- Damascus over a U.N. inquiry into the murder of a Lebanese ex-prime minister and Tehran over its nuclear plans. ``We support the right of Iran and any state in the world to acquire peaceful technology,'' Assad told a joint news conference after the talks. ``Countries who oppose this gave no convincing reason, regardless of whether it is legitimate or not.'' The United States and the European Union's three biggest powers, Britain, France and Germany, said this month Iran's resumption of nuclear research meant it should be referred to the U.N. Security Council, which could impose sanctions. Iran removed the U.N. seals on its uranium enrichment equipment but says it has no intention of building nuclear arms and seeks atomic energy only to generate electricity. Assad renewed Syria's call for a Middle East free of nuclear weapons and said ``the beginning should be with Israel.'' The Jewish state is widely believed to have nuclear weapons. Syria also faces pressure from the Security Council, which passed a resolution in October demanding it cooperate fully with a U.N. inquiry into the February 14 assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri or risk further action. Syria has denied any involvement in the murder but has said it will not allow investigators to question Assad in the case. STABILITY IN LEBANON Assad said he supported stability in Lebanon and called for an end to what he called foreign interference there. Lebanon has been rocked by more bombings and killings since Hariri's death for which many Lebanese politicians blame Syria. International and Lebanese pressure forced Syria to end its 29-year military presence in its smaller neighbor in April. ``We believe that the Lebanese people can find a solution and I call on all factions to show restraint and patience,'' Ahmadinejad said. Neither Syria nor Iran face an imminent threat of military action or broad sanctions at the United Nations, but will come under more diplomatic pressure on every front, analysts say. Assad was the first head of a foreign state to visit Iran after Ahmadinejad, a religious conservative, took office. Iran's new president seized that opportunity to vow closer cooperation in the face of U.S. pressure and is returning the visit at a time when Assad finds himself particularly isolated. Both accused by Washington of sponsoring terrorism, Syria and Iran are the main backers of Lebanon's Hizbollah group, itself under pressure to disarm under a 2004 U.N. resolution. Hizbollah, the only Lebanese group to keep its arms after Lebanon's 1975-1990 civil war, helped force Israel to end its 22-year occupation of southern Lebanon in 2000. Both Syria and Iran accuse the United States of backing the interests of their arch-foe Israel at the expense of Muslims and Arabs. They defend Hizbollah's right to resist the Jewish state. Ahmadinejad has caused an international furor by calling for Israel to be wiped out and describing the Holocaust, in which six million Jews were killed, as a myth.