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US warns Iran
over nuclear centrifuges
Foreign Desk Report
VIENNA—A top US envoy warned Iran Friday that its pursuit of more
advanced uranium-enriching technology would intensify the long-running
international standoff over its disputed atomic drive. “Any Iranian
attempt at a more advanced centrifuge would be an escalation of Iran’s
ongoing non-compliance with its obligation to suspend all
enrichment-related activities,” the US ambassador to the International
Atomic Energy Agency, Gregory Schulte.
It would constitute a “further violation of Iran’s international
commitments, further reason why we are concerned about the nature of
Iran’s nuclear programme and the intentions of its leaders, and further
reason for the Security Council to act,” he said.
Media reports have said Iran is testing advanced centrifuges to enrich
uranium, in flagrant defiance of UN resolutions to suspend all
enrichment activity until the IAEA, can verify that such activities are
entirely peaceful.
Enriched uranium is used to make nuclear fuel, but can also be used to
make fissile material for atomic bombs. Schulte said he could not
confirm that tests of the new generation of centrifuges were underway at
Iran’s nuclear facility in Natanz, as media reports had claimed. Both
the IAEA and Iran’s ambassador to the agency, Ali Asghar Soltanieh,
declined to comment on the matter. Schulte said would wait for a new
report by IAEA chief Mohammed ElBaradei to see exactly what Iran had
declared on its advanced centrifuge work.
“While we have no information on the technical nature of any new Iranian
centrifuge, we assume the purpose of testing is to increase Iran’s
potential enrichment capacity,” the ambassador said. Another western
diplomat, requesting anonymity, also said that such tests would make it
difficult to resolve the Iranian nuclear stand-off. “The IAEA and the UN
Security Council have been absolutely clear the Iran needs to suspend”
enrichment, the diplomat said. “Instead, it is rushing to develop new
enrichment technology. This seriously undermines confidence at a time
Iran should be doing as much as possible to restore it, given the real
lack of confidence that exists.”
Iran’s refusal to suspend its enrichment activities, in defiance of two
sets of UN sanctions and the threat of a possible third, have fuelled
western suspicions that Tehran is seeking to develop the atomic bomb.
Iran insists it has inalienable right to develop the technology to
generate nuclear power to meet the energy needs of a growing population.
US ambassador Schulte said there was no for Iran to enrich uranium,
since Russia is supplying fuel for its Bushehr nuclear reactor.
According to David Albright, head of the Washington-based Institute for
Science and International Security, Iran has been developing a new
advanced model of uranium-enriching centrifuges in order to overcome
technical problems dogging the P1 first-generation, centrifuges used so
far at Natanz. Last year, IAEA inspectors confirmed Iran’s claim that it
had 3,000 P1 centrifuges up and running in Natanz, the amount needed, in
ideal conditions, to produce enough material in one year to make a
single atom bomb. The P1 centrifuges are currently stimated to be
running at only 10 percent capacity.
Albright said that P2 second-generation centrifuges produce 2.5 times
more enriched uranium than P1 centrifuges, meaning only 1,200 of the
advanced centrifuges would be needed to produce enough material to make
a bomb.
Nevertheless, Iran has had to design and build its own modified version
of the P2 because foreign-made parts are difficult to come by given the
trade embargo in place against the Islamic republic.
Diplomats have suggested that Iran let IAEA chief ElBaradei see the
advanced centrifuges during a visit to Iran last month in a gesture of
cooperation. ElBaradei’s report is expected to be released around
February 20.
Iran has started building a second atomic power plant in an oil-rich
region near the border with Iraq, Iran’s Ambassador to Russia was quoted
as saying on Friday by Itar-Tass news agency.
Gholamreza Ansari said construction had started at Darkhovin in
south-western Khuzestan province. Iran has said it would construct a 360
megawatt plant at the site. “Now we need to think about the fuel for
it,” Tass quoted him as saying at a news briefing in Moscow. A spokesman
for the Iranian embassy confirmed the comment.
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