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Iran halted
nuke weapons plan: US
Foreign Desk Reportr
WASHINGTON—Iran halted its nuclear weapons development program in the
fall of 2003 under international pressure but is continuing to enrich
uranium, which means it may still be able to develop a weapon between
2010 and 2015, senior intelligence officials said Monday.
That finding, in a new National Intelligence Estimate on Iran, is a
change from two years ago, when U.S. intelligence agencies believed
Tehran was determined to develop a nuclear capability and was continuing
its weapons development program. It suggests that Iran is susceptible to
diplomatic pressure, the official said.
“Tehran’s decision to halt its nuclear weapons program suggests it is
less determined to develop nuclear weapons than we have been judging
since 2005,” states the unclassified summary of the secret report,
released Monday. Officials said the new findings suggest that diplomacy
has been effective in containing Iran’s nuclear ambitions.
“This is good news in that the U.S. policy coupled with the policies and
actions of those who have been our partners appear to have had some
success. Iran seems to have been pressured,” one of the officials said.
“Given that good news, we don’t want to relax. We want to keep those
pressures up.”
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not
authorized to speak on the record due to the subject’s sensitivity. The
finding comes at a time of escalating tensions between the United States
and Iran, which President Bush has labeled part of an “axis of evil,”
along with Iraq and North Korea.
The halt to active weapons development is one of the key judgments of
the latest NIE on Iran’s nuclear program. National Intelligence
Estimates represent the most authoritative written judgments of all 16
U.S. spy agencies.
Despite the suspension of its weapons program, Tehran may ultimately be
difficult to dissuade from developing a nuclear bomb because Iran
believes such a weapon would give it leverage to achieve its national
security and foreign policy goals, the assessment concluded.
Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell decided last month that
the key judgments of NIEs should as a rule not be declassified and
released. The intelligence officials said an exception was made in this
case because the last assessment of Iran’s nuclear program in 2005 has
been influential in public debate about U.S. policy toward Iran, and
needed to be updated to reflect the latest findings.
To develop a nuclear weapon, Iran needs a warhead design, a certain
amount of fissile material, and a delivery vehicle such as a missile.
The intelligence agencies now believe Iran halted design work four years
ago and as of mid-2007 had not restarted it.
But Iran is continuing to enrich uranium for its civilian nuclear
reactors. That leaves open the possibility the fissile material could be
diverted to covert nuclear sites to make enough highly enriched uranium
to make a bomb.
The amount of fissile material Iran has is closely linked to when it can
produce a weapon. Even if the country went all out with present
enrichment capability, it is unlikely to have enough until 2010 at the
earliest, the officials said. The State Department’s Intelligence and
Research office believes the earliest likely time it would have enough
highly enriched uranium would be 2013. But all agencies concede Iran may
not have sufficient enriched uranium until after 2015.
Iran would not be capable of technically producing and reprocessing
enough plutonium for a weapon before about 2015, the report states. But
ultimately it has the technical and industrial capacity to build a bomb,
“if it decides to do so,” the intelligence agencies found.
This national intelligence estimate was originally due in the spring of
2007 but was delayed because the agencies wanted more confidence their
findings were accurate, given the problems with a 2002 intelligence
estimate of Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction program. They also got a
late influx of new data that caused changes in their findings.
“There was a very rigorous scrub using all the tradecraft available,
using the lessons of 2002,” a senior official said. At the White House,
national security adviser Stephen Hadley said the findings confirm that
the risk of Iran acquiring a nuclear weapon remains “ a serious
problem.”
“The estimate offers grounds for hope that the problem can be solved
diplomatically without the use of force as the administration has been
trying to do,” Hadley said. “And it suggests that the president has the
right strategy: intensified international pressure along with a
willingness to negotiate a solution that serves Iranian interests, while
ensuring that the world will never have to face a nuclear armed Iran.”
Hadley added: “The bottom line is this: for that strategy to succeed,
the international community has to turn up the pressure on Iran with
diplomatic isolation, United Nations sanctions, and with other financial
pressure and Iran has to decide it wants to negotiate a solution.”
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