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NEWS & COMMENTARY: ABC News reports 'Iran intends to begin enriching uranium' Print E-mail
Written by Randy Talbot   
Tuesday, 10 January 2006

Reporter Jacqueline Shire said late Monday that "[s]ources with knowledge of Iran's nuclear program" have told ABC News that "a senior Iranian official notified the IAEA verbally over the weekend of its intention to introduce uranium hexafluoride gas, or UF6, into centrifuges at a facility in Natanz, 150 miles south of Tehran."[1]  --  "Introducing UF6 into centrifuges is the necessary step in producing enriched uranium."  --  "Iran has been warned by the United States, Britain, France, and Germany that any enrichment of nuclear fuel would constitute a "red line" it must not cross, or risk swift referral of the matter to the IAEA's governing board, and from there to the United Nations Security Council."  --  This despite international accords that permit the activity.  --  In fact, far from being a tell-tale sign of a nuclear weapons program, it is the case that most of the almost 500 commercial nuclear power reactors in the world today require enriched uranium for their fuel.  --  Indeed, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Japan, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States operate commercial uranium enrichment plants.  --  China, India, North Korea, Pakistan, and South Africa have also succeeded in enriching uranium.  --  Although Israel reportedly relies on plutonium rather than highly enriched uranium for its nuclear weapons, it too is said to have developed the ability to enrich uranium.  --  Since Iran has a sovereign right to enrich uranium, the threatened efforts "to seek punishments at the United Security Council" would seem to be toothless, and Iran has long said that it is unconcerned by the threat and will not renounce its rights.  --  These last points are now being omitted from mainstream media accounts in the West, however; see a piece written last August by Gordon Prather on how Western media are lying about Iran's nuclear program.  --  The Iranian interest in enriching uranium became public in February 2003, when "International Atomic Energy Agency director Mohamed ElBaradei announced he had discovered that Iran was constructing a facility to enrich uranium -- a key component of advanced nuclear weapons -- near Natanz," as Time reported on Mar. 8, 2003.  --  But this was not illegal: Iran had the right under international law to engage in the activity by which we now read, in newspapers like the New York Times, that Iran "forfeited" rights to a civilian nuclear program....

Exclusive

SOURCES: IRAN TO BEGIN ENRICHING URANIUM
By Jacqueline W. Shire

** ABC News Has Learned Iran Intends to Take Critical Step in Making Material for Nuclear Weapons **

ABC News
January 9, 2006

http://abcnews.go.com/International/story?id=1488020

[PHOTO CAPTION: The Natanz uranium enrichment facility buildings are pictured some 200 miles south of the capital Tehran, Iran, Wednesday, March 30, 2005. The central Iranian cities of Natanz and Isfahan house the heart of Iran's nuclear program.]

ABC News has learned that Iran intends to begin enriching uranium -- the critical step in making material for nuclear weapons -- a move European diplomats and officials at the International Atomic Energy Agency, or IAEA, have tried to prevent over the past three years.

Sources with knowledge of Iran's nuclear program tell ABC News that a senior Iranian official notified the IAEA verbally over the weekend of its intention to introduce uranium hexafluoride gas, or UF6, into centrifuges at a facility in Natanz, 150 miles south of Tehran.

Introducing UF6 into centrifuges is the necessary step in producing enriched uranium. The centrifuges work by separating out uranium-235 atoms, which can be used to make nuclear weapons and also to fuel nuclear reactors, from heavier uranium-238 atoms.

WARNINGS OF A 'RED LINE'

The enrichment of any uranium by Iran, even in small quantities, amounts to a significant ratcheting up of the tension between Iran and the international community over its nuclear program, and the final abrogation of the November 2004 agreement with the European Union that suspended much of Iran's nuclear activity.

Iran has been warned by the United States, Britain, France, and Germany that any enrichment of nuclear fuel would constitute a "red line" it must not cross, or risk swift referral of the matter to the IAEA's governing board, and from there to the United Nations Security Council.

Long-time Iran observers are taken aback by the boldness of Iran's move.

"When we learned last week that Iran was going to resume some 'research and development' work at Natanz, we assumed there would be some modest initial activity, such as the production of centrifuge components, but this is a much bigger step," said Robert Einhorn a former assistant secretary of state for nonproliferation who is now with the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Einhorn added that mastering the operation of a 164-centrifuge cascade -- such as the one at Iran's Natanz facility -- is a "significant milestone" giving Iran important experience in overcoming the technical hurdles of uranium enrichment that can be transferred to larger cascades.

Iran has maintained steadfastly its right to enrich uranium domestically, though it has promised to consider seriously a Russian proposal to establish a Russian-Iranian joint venture under which Russia would enrich uranium for Iran's use in nuclear reactors it seeks to build.

The Middle East nation publicly confirmed today it would resume nuclear fuel research, but the decision to actually begin enriching uranium represents a much more significant step.

An official from the IAEA would not confirm that Iran has discussed the use of UF6 in the centrifuges at Natanz, saying the agency is "still seeking detailed clarification as to what precisely Iran intends to do."

The centrifuges at Natanz are not immediately ready for the UF6 and would require some further assembly before the uranium gas could be introduced.

Experts familiar with Iran's centrifuge efforts believe they could be made ready within days, but it could take many years for Iran to produce a sufficient amount of enriched uranium for a nuclear bomb, given their existing centrifuge capabilities.

The amount of time Iran would need to produce enough enriched uranium for a bomb depends on several factors, including the enrichment level of the uranium gas used in the cascade and the power of the centrifuges. According to a report published by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, it could take Iran more than 10 years to produce 25 kilograms of 93 percent enriched high-enriched uranium using the 164 centrifuges it has currently at Natanz.

This time could be shortened to as little as two years if Iran uses UF6 that is already slightly enriched, according to the institute, or if the power of the centrifuges is increased.


Last Updated ( Tuesday, 10 January 2006 )
 
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