Iran said China and Russia were on hand for its own disarmament conference Saturday, held in response to a summit in Washington to which it was not invited and intended to hit back at nuclear-armed “bullies”. Iran said 60 countries were represented, including “seven or eight” foreign ministers and the deputy foreign ministers of China and Russia - the two major powers the West is pushing to accept new sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program. US President Barack Obama spoke to the leaders of both countries at his Washington summit on Monday and Tuesday where Iran's nuclear program was not on the official agenda but dominated talks on the sidelines. With new sanctions looking ever more likely, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad used his address to the conference to hit back at the “bullies” who were trying to prevent Iran gaining the nuclear knowhow it says is for purely peaceful purposes. “Unfortunately, the American government has both used nuclear weapons and has also officially threatened to use nuclear weapons,” Ahmadinejad told delegates gathered at the conference centre of the state broadcaster IRIB. “When those who possess nuclear weapons and use those weapons have the unequal veto right in the highest body responsible for international security, does this not mean encouraging others to proliferate nuclear weapons in order to provide their national security?” he asked. A US sanctions draft proposes new curbs on Iranian banking, a full arms embargo, tougher measures against Iranian shipping, moves against members of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and firms they control and a ban on new investments in Iran's energy sector. “The Security Council has openly turned into a tool for the implementation of the policies of a few bullying governments,” Ahmadinejad told the conference. He called for changes to its structure and to that of the UN International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) which had become “a political lever” to use against non