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Iran to address nuclear arms allegations: IAEA
Foreign Desk Report
VIENNA—Iran has agreed to answer intelligence allegations that it
studied how to design nuclear bombs, the chief of the U.N. nuclear
watchdog said on Wednesday. Mohamed ElBaradei called the gesture a
“milestone.” The Islamic Republic has previously denied the reports but
declined to address them in detail.
Resolving whether Iran secretly tried to “weaponise” nuclear materials
is key to winding up an International Atomic Energy Agency inquiry into
Iran’s nuclear program, now under U.N. sanctions due to suspicions of a
covert quest for bombs.
“(This agreement) is a certain milestone and hopefully by the end of May
we’ll be in position to get the explanation and clarification from Iran
as to these alleged studies,” IAEA Director-General ElBaradei said.
“This, in my view, is a positive step,” he told reporters during a visit
to the Bosnian capital Sarajevo. His spokeswoman said the deal was
struck during meetings in Tehran on Monday and Tuesday between Iranian
leaders and Olli Heinonen, the IAEA’s safeguards chief and top
investigator.
The IAEA did not elaborate. Iran had called the talks with Heinonen
“positive” but had not said what they involved. Iran has rejected the
intelligence about weapons experiments as fabricated. It said earlier
exchanges with the IAEA had resolved the issue and there would be no
more discussions.
But the IAEA has insisted Iran back up its denials with proof. U.S.
intelligence findings said Iran researched bomb designs until 2003 and
other countries believe the illicit work continued more recently.
An unidentified Iranian official in the delegation that met Heinonen did
not mention the deal in remarks released by the official news agency
IRNA. “Iran’s door is open for negotiations with IAEA legal
representatives and Iran will continue its cooperation with the agency
like before,” the official said.
Iran says its nuclear campaign aims solely to generate an alternative
source of electricity so that it can export more of its oil and gas. It
is the world’s No. 4 oil exporter.
But Iran’s history of nuclear secrecy and continued restrictions on IAEA
inspections fan Western suspicions that the underlying purpose of its
efforts to industrialize uranium enrichment is the ability to assemble
atom bombs. Iran is under sanctions for refusing to suspend the work.
Diplomats said the point of Heinonen’s trip was to push for Iranian
responses to the intelligence, which indicated Iran linked projects to
process uranium, test high explosives and modify a missile cone in a way
suitable for a nuclear warhead.
Western powers on the IAEA’s 35-nation board of governors have accused
Iran of evasive tactics that dragged out agency inquiries for years
before it supplied explanations that allowed the agency to resolve other
questions over the past six months.
“Answers are long overdue,” said a European diplomat accredited to the
IAEA when asked about the Iran-IAEA deal. “We hope Iran will now take
the opportunity to engage seriously on these important questions without
any further delay as requested in U.N. Security Council (resolutions)
and suspend all enrichment-related activities so as to allow
negotiations, to reach a long-term settlement to this issue,” he said.
ElBaradei is due to issue a quarterly report on Iran in late May,
shortly before an IAEA governors’ meeting.
The IAEA’s information, which remains unverified, comes from an Iranian
defector’s laptop computer handed to the United States in 2004,
intelligence from some other Western sources, and from investigations by
inspectors.
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