
THE HANDSTAND |
NOVEMBER-JANUARY2010
|
IAEA:
We found 'nothing to worry about' at secret Iran nuke
site
United Nations
inspectors found "nothing to be worried about"
in a first look at a previously secret uranium enrichment
site in Iran last month, the International Atomic Energy
chief said in remarks released Thursday.
Mohammed ElBaradei also told the New York Times that he
was examining possible compromises to unblock a draft
nuclear cooperation deal between Iran and three major
powers that has floundered over Iranian objections.
The nuclear site, which Iran revealed in September three
years after diplomats said Western spies first detected
it, added to Western fears of covert Iranian efforts to
develop atom bombs. Iran says it is enriching uranium
only for electricity.
ElBaradei was quoted in a New York
Times interview as saying his inspectors' initial
findings at the fortified site beneath a desert mountain
near the Shi'ite holy city of Qom were "nothing to
be worried about."
"The idea was to use it as a bunker under the
mountain to protect things," ElBaradei, alluding to
Tehran's references to the site as a fallback for its
nuclear program in case its larger Natanz enrichment
plant were bombed by a foe like Israel.
"It's a hole in a mountain," he said.
The IAEA has declined to comment on whether the
inspectors came across anything surprising or were able
to obtain all the documentation and on-site access they
had wanted at the remote spot about 160 km (100 miles)
south of Tehran.
Details are expected to be included in the next IAEA
report on Iran's disputed nuclear activity due in mid-November.
The inspectors' goal was to compare engineering designs
to be provided by Iran with the actual look of the
facility, interview scientists and other employees, and
take soil samples to check for any traces of activity
oriented to making bombs.
Western diplomats and analysts say the site's capacity
appears too small to fuel a nuclear power station but
enough to yield fissile material for one or two nuclear
warheads a year.
The Islamic Republic revealed the plant's existence to
the Vienna-based UN nuclear watchdog on Sept. 21. It said
the site, which remains under construction, would enrich
uranium only to the low 5 percent purity suitable for
power plant fuel.
Enrichment to the 90 percent threshold provides the
fissile material that detonates nuclear weapons.
After talks with Iran and three world powers, ElBaradei
drafted a plan for Iran to transfer most of its low-enriched
uranium (LEU) to Russia and France to turn it into fuel
for a Tehran reactor that makes isotopes for cancer
treatment.
Russia, France and the United States, which would help
modernize the reactor's safety equipment and
instrumentation under the deal, see it as a way to reduce
Iran's LEU stockpile below the threshold needed to
produce material for a bomb.
But since the Oct. 19-21 talks, Iran has made clear it is
loath to ship its own LEU abroad because of its strategic
value, and would prefer buying the reactor fuel it needs
from foreign suppliers. Iran has called for more talks.
Western diplomats say the three powers do not want more
talks and that Iran's demands are a non-starter as they
would do nothing to remove the risk of nuclear
proliferation in Iran.
ElBaradei was quoted by the New York Times as saying the
problem boiled down to "total distrust on the part
of Iran ..."
"The issue is timing, whether the uranium goes out
and then some time later they get the fuel, as we agreed
[tentatively] in Geneva, or whether it only goes at the
same time as the fuel is delivered," he said.
"There are a lot of ideas. One is to send [Iran's
uranium] to a third country, which could be a friendly
country to Iran, and it stays there. Park it in another
state ...[for] something like a year..., then ... bring
in the fuel. The issue is to get it out, and so create
the time and space to start building trust."
REUTERS IN hA'ARETZ
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