UN report hints at slowdown in Iran nuclear arsenal

IAEA report may provide world powers with chance to progress in negotiations; powers to make "substantial, serious offer."

Iran- P5+1 negotiations 370 (photo credit: REUTERS/Government Spokesman Office/Handout)
Iran- P5+1 negotiations 370
(photo credit: REUTERS/Government Spokesman Office/Handout)
VIENNA - A UN nuclear watchdog report due this week is expected to reveal a slowdown in the growth of Iran's stockpile of higher-grade enriched uranium as it is using some of the material to make reactor fuel, diplomats said on Wednesday.
If confirmed in the International Atomic Energy Agency's (IAEA) quarterly report, the development could be significant as it could help buy time for big power diplomacy to try and find a negotiated settlement to a decade-old dispute that has stirred fears of a new Middle East war.
Six world powers and Iran are due to meet for the first time in eight months next week to try again to break the stalemate but analysts expect no major progress toward defusing suspicions of an Iranian quest for nuclear weapons capability anytime soon.
Israel, which has warned it might bomb Iran's nuclear sites as a last resort, last year gave a rough deadline of mid-2013 as the date by which Tehran could have enough higher-grade uranium to produce a single atomic bomb.
But if Iran is converting some of that uranium to yield reactor fuel, thereby at least temporarily removing it from the stockpile that could be used for weapons if processed further, that may postpone the Israeli "red line" for action.
Any relief for Western powers may be short-lived, however, as Iran also plans to deploy advanced enrichment machines - a step that could speed up its accumulation of material that they fear could be used to devise a nuclear weapon.
Click here for full Jpost coverage of the Iranian threat
Click here for full Jpost coverage of the Iranian threat
Also underlining Iran's defiance of international demands to curb its nuclear program, diplomats say it is technically ready to sharply expand enrichment at its Fordow underground plant, where it is now operating at a quarter of its capacity.
Uncertain aims
Refined uranium can fuel nuclear energy plants, which is Iran's stated aim, or provide the core of an atomic bomb, which the United States and Israel suspect may be its ultimate goal.
Enriching uranium to a fissile concentration of 20 percent is especially worrisome for the West as it represents most of the work required to obtain weapons-grade material. Iran says it needs this enrichment level to fuel a medical research reactor.
Last year, Iran used nearly 100 kg (220 pounds) of the stockpile to make fuel for its reactor producing medical isotopes. It suddenly halted the process in September, leading to a jump of nearly 50 percent to 135 kg in the 20 percent uranium reserve by the time the IAEA issued its November report.
Experts say up to 240-250 kg would be required for a nuclear bomb, if refined to 90 percent. If Iran did not convert any of the material for fuel, and at current enrichment rates, it could reach this point by summer.
The Islamic Republic denies Western allegations that it is seeking to develop the capability to make nuclear arms and says it is Israel's assumed nuclear arsenal that threatens peace.
But the country's expanded uranium enrichment program and lack of full cooperation with UN nuclear inspectors have drawn increasingly tough sanctions on the major oil producer.
The United States, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany, the so-called P5+1, are due to meet Iran for talks in Kazakhstan on Feb. 26 to tackle the dispute over Tehran's nuclear aspirations.
They want Iran to halt 20 percent enrichment, shut Fordow and ship out the stockpile. Iran wants a recognition of what it sees as its right to refine uranium and an easing of sanctions.
Western diplomats argue that sanctions are taking their toll on Iran's economy and hoping as a result the new diplomatic push could succeed where past attempts have failed.
"We will take an offer with us which we believe to be a substantial and serious offer," the diplomat said of talks due next week in Almaty, Kazakhstan. "This is an offer which we think has significant new elements in it."
Analysts and diplomats say Iran's presidential election in June will make it hard for the Islamic Republic to make any concessions to foreign powers at this point.