United Nations: Delegates from the United States and other nations  walked out of the U.N. General Assembly on Thursday as Iranian President  Mahmoud Ahmadinejad delivered a fiery speech that criticized  Washington, capitalism and the world body itself.
Though  incendiary statements from Ahmadinejad are nothing new, tension in the  hall grew as the Iranian leader recounted various conspiracy theories  about the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on New York and  Washington.
"Some segments within the U.S. government  orchestrated the attack," Ahmadinejad told the General Assembly. He  followed with the claim that the attacks were aimed at reversing "the  declining American economy and its scripts on the Middle East in order  to save the Zionist regime. The majority of the American people, as well  as most nations and politicians around the world, agree with this  view."
That appeared to be the last straw for many of the  diplomats. Representatives from the United States, Britain, Sweden,  Australia, Belgium, Uruguay and Spain walked out while Ahmadinejad  asserted that U.S. government was involved in the attacks or allowed  them to happen as an excuse to go to war in Afghanistan and Iraq.
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President  Barack Obama already had delivered his address to the General Assembly  and had left the grounds before Ahmadinejad spoke. White House spokesman  Robert Gibbs said the president "found the comments to be outrageous  and offensive, given how close we are to ground zero," the New York site  of the attacks.
And Mark Kornblau, a spokesman for the U.S.  mission to the U.N., said in a statement, "Rather than representing the  aspirations and goodwill of the Iranian people, Mr. Ahmadinejad has yet  again chosen to spout vile conspiracy theories and anti-Semitic slurs  that are as abhorrent and delusional as they are predictable."
A  European Union diplomat said that all 27 member nations had agreed to  walk out if Ahmadinejad made inflammatory statements during his address.
The  exits did not deter the Iranian leader from his line of attack,  however. Ahmadinejad went on to compare the death toll in the September  11 attacks to the casualty count in the wars in Afghanistan in Iraq.
"It  was said that some 3,000 people were killed on September 11th, for  which we are all very saddened," he said. "Yet, up until now in  Afghanistan and Iraq, hundreds of thousands of people have been killed,  millions wounded and displaced, and the conflict is still going on and  expanding."
Ahmadinejad also continued the attack on capitalism  that he began during a Monday address at the Millennium Global  Development Summit. He linked the U.S.-led conflicts in Iraq and  Afghanistan with wars for colonial expansion in Africa, Latin America  and Asia.
The Iranian president also touched on the recent  controversy over a Florida pastor`s plans to burn copies of the Quran,  the Muslim holy book, by waving copies of a Bible and a Quran as he  declared his respect and reverence for both. And he concluded his  address with a defense of Iran`s nuclear ambitions, discussing a  recently submitted statement to the U.N.`s nuclear watchdog, the  International Atomic Energy Agency.
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