Iran intends to enrich uranium on a scale hundreds of times larger than its
current level, the country's deputy nuclear chief said Wednesday, signaling its
resolve to expand a program the international community insists it halt.
Iran's President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad speaks in Torbate Heydarieh in Khorasan Razavi
province, 890 km (530 miles) northeast of Tehran, Iran, Wednesday, April
12, 2006. Denouncing Iran's successful enrichment of uranium as
unacceptable to the international community, U.S. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice said Wednesday the U.N. Security Council must consider
'strong steps' to induce Tehran to change course.
[AP] |
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Tuesday that Iran for the first time had
succeeded on a small scale in enriching uranium, a key step in generating fuel
for a reactor or fissile material for a bomb. The U.N. Security Council has
demanded that Iran stop all enrichment activity because of suspicions the
program's aim is to make weapons.
Iran's small-scale enrichment used 164 centrifuges, which spin uranium gas to
increase its proportion of the isotope needed for the nuclear fission at the
heart of a nuclear reactor or a bomb.
Saeedi said Iran has informed the International Atomic Energy Agency that it
plans to install 3,000 centrifuges at its facility in the central town of Natanz
by late 2006, then expand to 54,000 centrifuges, though he did not say when.
"We will expand uranium enrichment to industrial scale at Natanz," Deputy
Nuclear Chief Mohammad Saeedi told state-run television.
Saeedi said using 54,000 centrifuges will be able to produce enough enriched
uranium to provide fuel for a 1,000-megawatt nuclear power plant like one Russia
is finishing in southern Iran.
In theory, that many centrifuges could be used to develop the material needed
for hundreds of nuclear warheads if Iran can perfect the techniques for
producing the highly enriched uranium needed.
Iran, which has made no secret of its plans to ultimately expand enrichment
to around 50,000 centrifuges to fuel reactors, is still thought to be years away
from a full-scale program.
Still, concerns grew Tuesday when Ahmadinejad announced Iran's enrichment
success in a nationally televised ceremony, saying the country's nuclear
ambitions are peaceful and warning the West that trying to force Iran to abandon
enrichment would "cause an everlasting hatred in the hearts of Iranians."
The IAEA is due to report to the Security Council on April 28 whether Iran
has met its demand for a full halt to uranium enrichment. If Tehran has not
complied, the council will consider the next step. The U.S. and Europe are
pressing for sanctions, a step Russia and China have so far opposed.
Iran's announcement quickly drew condemnations.
Russia criticized the announcement Wednesday, with Foreign Ministry spokesman
Mikhail Kamynin saying, "We believe that this step is wrong. "
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov reiterated Moscow's firm opposition to
any military action against Iran.
Denouncing Iran's successful enrichment of uranium as unacceptable to the
international community, Secretary of State Conodoleezza Rice said the U.N.
Security Council must consider "strong steps" to induce Tehran to change course.
Rice also telephoned IAEA head Mohamed ElBaradei to ask him to reinforce
demands that Iran comply with its nonproliferation requirements when he holds
talks in Tehran on Friday.
"This is not a question of Iran's right to civil nuclear power," she said.
"This is a question of ... the world does not believe that Iran should have the
capability and the technology that could lead to a nuclear weapon."
Rice did not call for an emergency meeting of the Council, saying it should
consider action after receiving an IAEA report by April 28. She did not
elaborate on what measures the United States would support, but economic and
political sanctions are under consideration.
In Berlin, Chancellor Angela Merkel's government said Iran's announcement was
cause for concern.
"It is another step in the wrong direction by Iran," German government
spokesman Thomas Steg said.
French government spokesman Jean-Francois Cope urged Iran "to respect its
obligations" and stop nuclear activities.
British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said he was "seriously concerned" by
Ahmadinejad's announcement.
Israel's military chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Dan Halutz, cautioned that it will
take some time before Iran achieves nuclear capability. "I think things will
change in this process and we shouldn't see this as a foregone conclusion," he
told Army Radio.
The chief of military intelligence, Maj. Gen. Amos Yadlin, told the Yediot
Ahronot newspaper that Iran could develop a nuclear weapon "within three years,
by the end of the decade."
ElBaradei was heading to Iran on Wednesday for talks aimed at resolving the
standoff. The timing of Ahmadinejad's announcement suggested Iran wanted to
present ElBaradei with a fait accompli and argue that it cannot be expected to
entirely give up a program showing progress.
Former Iranian President Hashemi Rafsanjani ¡ª a powerful figure in the
country's clerical regime ¡ª warned in an interview with the Kuwaiti newspaper
Al-Rai Al-Aam that pressuring Iran over enrichment "might not have good
consequences for the area and the world."
Rafsanjani, who heads the body that arbitrates between the parliament and the
clerical hierarchy, said planned talks between Iran and the United States on
stabilizing Iraq could lead to discussions on the nuclear dispute.
"If the talks on Iraq go in the right direction, there might be a possibility
for that issue," Rafsanjani told the Al-Hayat daily. "There have been many cases
where big and wide-ranging decisions had small beginnings."
Iranian and U.S. officials have insisted the talks will deal only with Iraq.
So far, no date for the talks has been set.
Rafsanjani and other Iranian officials, meanwhile, reiterated that the
country's nuclear ambitions were peaceful.
"There is no worry as we will not threaten anyone," Rafsanjani said as he
arrived in Damascus on Wednesday, according to Syria's official news agency.
Thousands of centrifuges arranged in a network called a "cascade" are needed
to produce enriched uranium. Getting any number to work together is delicate and
difficult.
Iran resumed research on enrichment at Natanz in February. Saeedi said
scientists there slowly built up the number of centrifuges in the cascade. On
Sunday, they succeeded in enriching an amount of uranium to contain 3.5 percent
of the isotope uranium-235 ¡ª the proportion needed for reactor fuel ¡ª using 164
centrifuges.
Enriching uranium to the much higher levels needed for a nuclear warhead is
even more difficult, requiring tens of thousands of centrifuges or much longer
periods of time.
Iran is believed to have enough black-market components in storage now to
build the 1,500 operating centrifuges it would need to make the 45 pounds of
highly enriched uranium needed for one crude weapon.
"The next stage is to install 3,000 centrifuges. We definitely won't have
problems doing that. We just need to increase our production line," Saeedi said.
Iran is pressing for further negotiations with the IAEA or with Western
countries, hinting that it could agree to keep its enrichment program on a small
scale under IAEA inspection without giving it up entirely.