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Iran dismisses US claim on atomic weapons work
Foreign Desk Report
TEHRAN—Iran on Sunday dismissed fresh US allegations about its atomic
ambitions as a bid to blight a crucial meeting of the UN nuclear
watchdog later this month. U.S. officials said new evidence suggested
Iran had made significant progress in what they call its secret pursuit
of nuclear weapons, and that this strengthened the case for more
international pressure on Tehran to end the programme.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi rejected the allegations as
an attempt to ratchet up pressure on Tehran. “It is another fuss ahead
of the IAEA board meeting to poison the board’s atmosphere,” he told a
news conference.
The International Atomic Energy Agency board meets on November 24 to
decide whether to refer Iran to the U.N. Security Council for possible
sanctions after failing to convince world powers that its atomic
ambitions are entirely peaceful. The New York Times reported on Saturday
that senior American intelligence officials informed the IAEA in
mid-July about the contents of what they said was a stolen Iranian
laptop computer.
One U.S. official said the data was not definitive, but “strongly
suggestive that Iran had made significant advancement towards
weaponisation”. Sources close to the IAEA confirmed that CIA officials
had made a presentation at the agency’s Vienna headquarters in July, but
said the evidence was not clear-cut.
“There was a meeting in July where we were shown information — basically
design work on a missile cone, that is, the space where the warhead
would go,” one source said. “The information did not seem conclusive,
the ‘smoking gun’. No one has augmented this data since, and we are in
no position to know whether the data indeed came from the Iranians.”
Iran, which kept a uranium enrichment programme secret for 18 years
until 2003, denies Western accusations that it is trying to build
nuclear weapons under cover of an atomic power programme and says it
only wants to generate electricity. “The baseless claim made us laugh.
We do not use laptops to keep our classified documents,” Asefi said.
He reiterated that Iran intended to enrich uranium on its territory,
implicitly rejecting what diplomats say is a Russian proposal to defuse
the nuclear standoff with Tehran.
The diplomats said Moscow’s plan enjoys tentative backing from the
European Union and the United States. It would let Iran convert uranium,
but enrichment would be carried out in Russia. An EU diplomat has said
the United States and the EU will push for Iran to be sent to the
Security Council at the November 24 IAEA meeting if it snubs the
putative Russian proposal.
The New York Times, quoting European and U.S. participants at the July
meeting, said the U.S. intelligence officials had shown IAEA officials
data from more than 1,000 pages of Iranian computer simulations and
accounts of experiments. The U.S. officials, the paper said, argued that
the data showed a long effort to design a nuclear warhead and
constituted “the strongest evidence yet that, despite Iran’s insistence
that its nuclear programme is peaceful, the country is trying to develop
a compact warhead to fit atop its Shahab missile, which can reach Israel
and other countries in the Middle East”. But The New York Times said
that apart from Britain, France and Germany, which have joined
Washington in demanding that Iran halt suspicious nuclear activities,
other nations are sceptical. |