'Revolutionary guards foresee day after nuke test'

Website anticipates the day after Iran runs first test of nuclear bomb, breaking taboo that its nuclear program is peaceful, 'Guardian' reports.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at nuclear plant (Reuters) 311 (photo credit: Reuters)
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at nuclear plant (Reuters) 311
(photo credit: Reuters)
The day after Iran's first nuclear test will be a "normal day," Gerdab, an Iranian website run by the country's Revolutionary guards said, according to a Guardian blog post published Wednesday.
The report cites an article published on the Iranian website which anticipates the day after the first test of a nuclear bomb, which has been a "taboo" issue as Iran insisted that it's nuclear program is meant for peaceful purposes.
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The Guardian quotes the website's prediction of what will happen the day after a nuclear test: "The day before [the nuclear test], probably in central deserts of Iran, where once Americans and some other Western countries wanted to bury their nuclear waste, an underground nuclear explosion has taken place. The strength of the explosion was not so great as to cause severe damage to the region nor so weak that Iranian scientists face any problems in running their tests."
"Today is a normal day like any other," the Iranian website said. "Like 90% of the year, there is news about Iran, and these are the headlines which can be seen on foreign news sites: Reuters: Iran detonated its nuclear bomb. CNN: Iran detonated nuclear bomb. Al-Jazeera: The second Islamic nuclear bomb was tested. Al-Arabyia: The Shia nuclear bomb was tested. Yahoo! News: Nuclear explosion in Iran. Jerusalem Post: Mullahs obtained nuclear weapon."
Meanwhile, the website says Iranian media will congratulate the regime on it's "successful" nuclear test, with potential local headlines expected to say, "Iran's first nuclear bomb was tested," and "Iran's much anticipated nuclear bomb exploded."
The Iranian article, which first appeared in April, reiterates that an Iranian nuclear test will not result in disaster, rather life will go on as before and Iranians will even feel better.
"The day after the Islamic Republic of Iran's first nuclear test will be an ordinary day for us Iranians but in the eyes of some of us there will be a new sparkle. A sparkle of national pride and strength," the Guardian quoted the website as saying.
The Guardian blog post said the article could be designed to have Iranians become accustomed to the idea of a nuclear test, and less concerned with international reaction, or it could be an act of defiance against the world.
The article comes after Iran announced on Wednesday that it will shift its production of higher grade uranium to an underground bunker and triple its production capacity.