http://www.cnn.com/2002/WORLD/meast/12/12/iran.nuclear/index.html

The United States has evidence that Iran has secretly been constructing
large nuclear facilities -- sites that could possibly be used to make
nuclear weapons, senior U.S. officials tell CNN.
Commercial satellite photographs taken in September show a nuclear facility
near the town of Natanz and another one near Arak, the officials said.

"It's disturbing news. We don't need another nuclear power -- not with Iran
sponsoring terrorism that it has in the past," said Sen. Richard Shelby,
R-Alabama, the vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee.

"The fact that they are seemingly pursuing an avenue to build nuclear
weapons should be disturbing to everybody," he said.

Iranian dissidents have long contended that Iran has been working on nuclear
capabilities. But the new satellite photographs and the conclusions drawn by
them by nuclear experts are the first time there has been any evidence to
support such claims.

Nuclear expert David Albright said the size and secrecy of the program to
date suggest that Iran may be working toward building nuclear weapons.

"Iran looks like it's building very large nuclear facilities that could be
part of an effort to make the material you need to make nuclear weapons," he
said.

Albright is head of the Institute for Science and International Security
(ISIS), which identified the photographs. ISIS is a non-profit, non-partisan
institution that focuses on stopping the spread of nuclear weapons.

The satellite picture of the facility near Arak concerns nuclear experts.

"This is a heavy water plant. It's very similar to other heavy water plants
we've seen in areas such as Pakistan, and the important facilities here is
this kind of Z-shaped structure," said Corey Hinderstein, also of ISIS.

The large facility at Natanz appears to U.S. intelligence officials to be a
uranium enrichment plant and civilian experts agree with that assessment.

"We believe this is a uranium enrichment facility and could be a centrifuge
facility," said Hinderstein.

Iran has a publicly declared nuclear program at Bushehr that is designed
only to produce peaceful nuclear power for electricity, according to the
country's U.N. ambassador.

"I can categorically tell you that Iran does not have a nuclear weapons
program," said Javad Zarif. "Any facility we have ... if it is dealing with
nuclear technology, it is within the purview of our peaceful nuclear
program."

A spokesman at the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna confirms the
agency is seeking access to the two sites and has so far been put off by
Iran.

Iranian officials say a trip by senior IAEA officials to Iran is expected in
February. IAEA officials say on that trip they want to visit Arak and
Natanz.

Iran has signed the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. The
IAEA is the international agency that verifies compliance with the treaty
for its member states.

IAEA officials also point out that to date nothing that Iran is known to
have done has violated international law.

Iranian officials say the United States cannot be trusted on the details of
its nuclear program since Washington does not want Iran to have any
program -- not even for civilian energy.

The revelation of Iran's two plants comes one day after the Bush
administration released its strategy to combat weapons of mass destruction.
The report warned that any nation using such weapons against the United
States or its allies would face massive retaliation, perhaps with nuclear
weapons.

Bush labeled Iran an "axis of evil," along with Iraq and North Korea, in his
State of the Union address earlier this year.



xponent

Iran - Iraq War Maru

rob


_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to