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Iran dismisses nuke documents as fakes
VIENNA (Austria)—The U.N. nuclear monitoring agency presented documents
that diplomats said indicate Iran may have focused on a nuclear weapons
program after 2003 — the year that a U.S. intelligence report says such
work stopped. Iran again denied ever trying to make such arms. Ali
Ashgar Soltanieh, the chief Iranian delegate to the International Atomic
Energy Agency, dismissed the information showcased by the body Monday as
“forgeries.”
He and other diplomats, all linked to the IAEA, commented after a
closed-door presentation to the agency’s 35-nation board of intelligence
findings from the U.S. and its allies and other information purporting
to show Iranian attempts to make nuclear arms. A summarized U.S.
National Intelligence Estimate, made public late last year, also came to
the conclusion that Tehran was conducting atomic weapons work. But it
said the Iranians froze such work in 2003.
Asked whether board members were shown information indicating Tehran
continued weapons-related activities after that time, Simon Smith, the
chief British delegate to the IAEA, said: “Certainly some of the dates
... went beyond 2003.” He did not elaborate. But another diplomat at the
presentation, who agreed to discuss the meeting only if not quoted by
name, said some of the documentation focused on an Iranian report on
nuclear activities that some experts have said could be related to
weapons. She said it was unclear whether the project was being actively
worked on in 2004 or the report was a review of past activities. Still,
any Iranian focus on nuclear weapons work in 2004 would at least
indicate continued interest past the timeframe outlined in the U.S.
intelligence estimate. A senior diplomat who attended the IAEA meeting
said that among the material shown was an Iranian video depicting
mock-ups of a missile re-entry vehicle. He said IAEA Director General
Oli Heinonen suggested the component — which brings missiles back from
the stratosphere — was configured in a way that strongly suggests it was
meant to carry a nuclear warhead.
Other documentation showed the Iranians experimenting with warheads and
missile trajectories where “the height of the burst ... didn’t make
sense for conventional warheads,” he said. Smith and the senior diplomat
both said the material shown to the board came from a variety of
sources, including information gathered by the agency and intelligence
provided by member nations. “The assumption is this was not something
that was being thought about or talked about, but the assumption is it
was being practically worked on,” Smith told reporters.
He said the IAEA presented a “fairly detailed set of illustrations and
descriptions of how you would build a nuclear warhead, how you would fit
it into a delivery vehicle, how you would expect it to perform.” The
U.N. agency released a report last week saying that suspicions about
most past Iranian nuclear activities had eased or been laid to rest. But
the report also noted Iran had rejected documents linking it to missile
and explosives experiments and other work connected to a possible
nuclear weapons program, calling the information false and irrelevant.
The report called weaponization “the one major ... unsolved issue
relevant to the nature of Iran’s nuclear program.” Most of the material
shown to Iran by the IAEA on alleged attempts to make nuclear arms came
from Washington, though some was provided by U.S. allies, diplomats told
the AP. The agency shared it with Tehran only after the nations gave
their permission.
The IAEA report also confirmed that Iran continued to enrich uranium
despite demands by the U.N. Security Council to suspend the work. The
council has sanctions on Iran for continuing enrichment, which can
produce the material needed to make atomic bombs. Iran says its
enrichment program is intended solely to produce lower-grade material
for fueling nuclear reactors that would generate electricity. Iran’s
ambassador to the United Nations, Mohammad Khazee, said the intelligence
information turned over to the IAEA was “baseless” and alleged it was
fabricated by an Iranian opposition group.—Agencies
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