TEHRAN: Iran has written to United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan to complain about the perceived threat of a United States attack, the state news agency IRNA said on Monday.
The letter, forwarded to the United Nations chief by Iran's ambassador in New York Mohammad Javad Zarif, condemned "American officials for their illegitimate and open threats to use force against the Islamic republic of Iran".
"These are in obvious contravention of international rules and the principles of the United Nations," the letter said.
It said that "these rude threats have recently been publicised through some reports in US newspapers", and noted a report in the New Yorker magazine that US planners had even looked into using nuclear 'bunker-busters' to strike Iran's atomic facilities.
"These (threats) have entered a new stage, with the refusal of US officials to deny these reports," the letter said.
"Therefore it is necessary for the United Nations and the Security Council to pay serious attention to these threats and illegal remarks and take quick and firm action," the letter said.
In its April 17 issue, The New Yorker magazine said the administration of President George W Bush was planning a massive bombing campaign against Iran.
A similar report was carried by the Washington Post, although US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld dismissed the reports as "fantasyland".
Nevertheless, the US has not ruled out military action even though it insists it want to resolve the crisis over Iran's nuclear ambitions diplomatically.
Iran insists it only wants to generate atomic energy.