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Middle East & Israel Breaking News » Iranian - Iran News » Article

IAEA: Iran may be hiding more facilities


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Article's topics: IranIAEANuclear WeaponsQomBarack Obama 

The International Atomic Energy Agency has raised concern about possible further secret nuclear sites in Iran, beyond the enrichment site at Qom that was revealed nearly two months ago, Reuters reported, quoting an IAEA report the news agency obtained Monday.

Iranian President Mahmoud...

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
Photo: AP [file]

SLIDESHOW: Israel & Region  |  World

According to the document, Iran told the IAEA it had begun building the site at Qom, called Fordo, in 2007 - but the IAEA, the United Nations' global nuclear proliferation watchdog, had evidence the project had begun in 2002, paused in 2004 and resumed in 2006.

The report said Iran had provided full access to IAEA inspectors on their first visit to the Qom site three weeks ago, but had yet to provide full, credible answers to verify that the plant was only for civilian purposes.

"The agency has indicated [to Iran] that its declaration of the new facility reduces the level of confidence in the absence of other nuclear facilities under construction and gives rise to questions about whether there were any other nuclear facilities not declared to the agency. Moreover, Iran's delay in submitting such information to the agency does not contribute to the building of confidence," The report states.

The IAEA also said Teheran had yet to give answers about the site's chronology and purpose.

The report also said that Iranian technicians have moved highly sophisticated technical equipment into the previously secret uranium enrichment site in preparation for starting it up in 2011.

The document offered no estimate of the new plant's capabilities, but a senior international official familiar with the watchdog agency's work in Iran said it appeared designed to produce about a ton of enriched uranium a year.

That would be enough for a nuclear warhead, but too little to fuel the nearly finished plant at the southern port of Bushehr and other civilian reactors Iran is planning to bring on line in the coming years.

The IAEA also noted that Iran's enrichment at the Natanz site - revealed by dissidents in 2002 and under agency monitoring - was stagnating, with output remaining at mid-2009 levels.

The report did not offer a reason. But the official suggested that nuclear experts previously working at Natanz could now be preoccupied with putting the finishing touches on the newly discovered Fordo site.

As early as three years ago, Iranian officials had announced that immediate plans for the Natanz site were to install about 8,000 enriching centrifuges, and Monday's report suggested that Teheran had reached that goal.

The seven-page report - the latest IAEA summary of what it knows about Iran - said that as of November 2, about 8,600 centrifuges had been set up, but only about 4,000 were enriching - or 600 fewer than in September.

Still, the official said output had been steady since June, with about 100 kg. of enriched uranium being produced a month.

The report said that Natanz had churned out close to 1,800 kg. of low-enriched, or nuclear fuel-grade uranium by November 2 - close to the amount considered by experts that would be needed for two nuclear weapons.

But the report's main focus was Fordo, a highly fortified underground space. Iran informed the IAEA only in September that it was building the facility, leading the US, British and French leaders to denounce Teheran for keeping its existence secret.

IAEA inspectors visited the plant last month and the report noted "an advanced stage of construction," with support equipment for centrifuges already in place.

Iran says it fulfilled its legal obligations when it revealed the plant's construction, although IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei has said Teheran was "outside the law" and should have informed his agency when the decision to build was made.

Nations suspicious of Teheran's nuclear program believe the Islamic Republic decided to inform the IAEA only after it became convinced that the plant's existence had been noted by foreign intelligence services - and was about to be revealed by Western leaders.

A senior Western official recently told The Associated Press that Fordo appeared too small to house a civilian nuclear program but large enough to serve for military activities.

Monday's report - prepared for a meeting next week of the IAEA's 35-nation board - did not address the issue of size or function, beyond saying that the Fordo facility would house about 3,000 centrifuges, which the senior international official said could turn out about just over a ton of enriched uranium annually.

Fordo's existence has heightened concerns of other possible undeclared facilities that are not under IAEA purview and therefore can be used for military purposes

Also on Monday, Russian news agencies reported the reactor at the plant that Russia is building near Bushehr will not be switched on this year as planned.

The agencies quote Energy Minister Sergei Shmatko as saying that while Moscow expects to make "serious progress" by the end of the year, "there will be no startup."

Officials in Russia and Iran previously announced plans to switch on the reactor this year.

Russia also says Iran must not acquire nuclear weapons, but it has close ties with Teheran and has pledged to complete the more than decade-old project.

Meanwhile, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said that an impasse in nuclear talks between world powers and Iran would only hurt the West by making Teheran push harder to advance its technology.

Ahmadinejad's comments can be seen as a veiled threat that Iran would go ahead with enriching uranium to a higher level should negotiations with the international community fail.

"Cooperation with Iran is in the West's interest," while pressures on the Persian nation would only make the country "more powerful and advanced," he said, according to a statement posted late Sunday on the presidential Web site.

Ahmadinejad also reiterated that Iran's nuclear rights are not negotiable and that the country's nuclear activities would only continue within the framework of the UN nuclear watchdog. The Web statement did not elaborate on how Western pressure would embolden Iran.

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Post comment | Terms | Report Abuse
51. #43. A "PREJUDICED" "white" man? Give me good arguments to show...
LATIN LOVER.(ANTI-ZIONIST). - OCCUPIED PALESTINE.(NAKBA) (11/18/2009 17:25)
50. #48. Dublin. That's Six feet under!
ed - USA (11/18/2009 16:35)
49. #47 ed- One does not have to make a point to answer everyone.People are far smarter than given them credit for.Allow them to make their own judgements
Chancellor J. - USA (11/18/2009 13:13)
48. Iran and Israel
Dublin - Ireland (11/18/2009 10:58)
47. #46.Chancellor J. You seem to have missed the point! The "education"? Thanks, but no thanks!
ed - USA (11/18/2009 08:27)
46. #43 ed- allow me to educate you
Chancellor J. - USA (11/18/2009 04:45)
45. #43 ed , dude whats wrong with you take a chill pill or somthing (don't be hating)
arash - usa (11/18/2009 04:32)
44. #41 yo eddy nice post but...............
arash - usa (11/18/2009 04:19)
43. #41. Gabriel. One more thing! You know you have a problem when Latin Loser is on your side! To him, you're just another..
ed - USA (11/18/2009 01:13)
42. #41. Gabriel. Thanks for the post! I certainly had a good laugh! Now, let me try to sober you up!
ed - USA (11/17/2009 23:45)
41. Iran And Israel
Gabriel - Ireland (11/17/2009 22:41)
40. Damian, # 24...
Cheri - US (11/17/2009 22:09)
39. to # 23, Johan...
Cheri - US (11/17/2009 22:06)
38. #27 Latin Lover
Giulia - Italy (11/17/2009 18:19)
37. Ref # 24
Tom Dickson - (11/17/2009 17:36)
36. Iran's leadership are the mullahs, it is their motivation for obtaining nuclear weapons that needs to be feared.
BH - USA (11/17/2009 17:31)
35. I'M HIDING FORT KNOX SOMEWHERE - Guess Where ??
GoogleMaps - GoogleEarth (11/17/2009 17:13)
34. #27
Ross - Canada (11/17/2009 14:09)
33. This subject needs teeth
jethro mayham - vietnam (11/17/2009 13:56)
32. Iran?
Carlos - (11/17/2009 11:35)
31. Scream all u want in d media till u go blue in the face..Nothing will happen:)
John - a good place:) (11/17/2009 08:46)
30. #27. Latin in Lunar Orbit! U.S. history need not justify anything to you or your kind (of Mind)! It was your friend Castro who recommended..
ed - USA (11/17/2009 07:33)
29. Iranians want Nukes very bad.
Middle East Guru - Iraq (11/17/2009 07:13)
28. Surprise-Surprise-Surprise
Eddie Gin - usa (11/17/2009 06:21)
27. #15. BUT... criminal USA incinerated 350.000 people in Hiroshima-Nagazaki!!!
LATIN LOVER.(ANTI-ZIONIST). - OCCUPIED PALESTINE.(NAKBA) (11/17/2009 05:25)
26. WHAT TO DO
stephen keilty - northern ireland (11/17/2009 04:06)
25. Obama is a fool, enouhg wasting time
bo jones - (11/17/2009 03:32)
24. Israel - the greatest threat to peace in the Middle East.
Damian Lataan - Australia (11/17/2009 02:28)
23. Nukes bring peace
Johan - Australia (11/17/2009 01:48)
22. When will Israel strike?
Lance - United States (11/17/2009 01:25)
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