Army takes control of Iran nukes


By David R. Sands
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
October 5, 2005 

http://insider.washingtontimes.com/articles/normal.php?StoryID=20051005-1214
00-6491r

Iran's new president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has placed the military firmly in
control of his nation's nuclear program, undercutting his government's claim
that the program is intended for civilian use, according to a leading
opposition group. 
    Leaders of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), the force
created specifically to defend the 1979 Islamic revolution, now dominate
Iran's Supreme National Security Council, the country's top foreign
policy-making body under the constitution. 
    Mr. Ahmadinejad, a little-known former mayor of Tehran before his
surprise election in July, is a former IRGC commander, as is new council
Secretary-General Ali Larijani, who has taken the lead in negotiations about
Iran's nuclear programs. 
    Revolutionary Guard commanders also have taken charge of the council's
internal security, strategy and political posts, according to a report
issued by the Paris-based National Council of Resistance of Iran. A
Revolutionary Guard veteran even serves as the council's press spokesman. 
    "The military under the new president is firmly in control of the
nuclear program and the nuclear negotiations with the United Nations and the
West," said Mohammad Mohaddessin, chairman of the NCRI's foreign affairs
committee, in a telephone interview yesterday. 
    The personnel changes "make it less and less credible that Iran is
pursuing nuclear programs for peaceful uses," he said. 
    The report, which also tracks Iran's extensive nuclear infrastructure
and technical programs, charges that Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah
Khamanei has turned to IRGC personnel in order to "eliminate all
bureaucratic and political obstacles to obtaining nuclear weapons." 
    Iran, which claims the right to pursue a civilian nuclear program to
meet its domestic energy needs, is in intense negotiations with European
Union powers France, Britain and Germany over the fate of its nuclear
programs. 
    The Bush administration is deeply skeptical of Tehran's ambitions. The
board of the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog agency last month threatened to refer
Iran to the U.N. Security Council for possible sanctions if it does not
allow tight international oversight of its programs. 
    The NCRI is the political arm of the People's Mujahadeen, a secular
Iranian bloc that broke violently with the Islamic leaders of the revolution
shortly after the ouster of the U.S.-backed Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. 
    The opposition group has had a checkered and at times contradictory
role. Branded a terrorist group by U.S. and European governments, it also
has proven to be the single best intelligence source on Iran's clandestine
nuclear programs, exposing in recent years massive research and testing
sites inside Iran unknown to U.N. and Western monitors. 
    But other analysts also have reported a wave of senior appointments for
Iran's military, especially from within the more ideological forces under
the direct control of the ruling Islamic clerics. 
    Houchang Hassan-Yari, a political scientist at the Royal Military
College of Canada, noted in a recent analysis that current and former
members of the IRGC now can be found throughout Iran's political and
administrative bureaucracy, from lawmakers in parliament to mayors,
university officials and even managers of some of Iran's biggest business
concerns. 
    The corps is "on the verge of being transformed from a junior player in
the country's military defense to a key factor in the country's military and
security doctrine -- a rise that could come at the [traditional] army's
expense," he noted. 
    Bill Samii, an Iranian analyst for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, said
a key factor in Mr. Ahmadinejad's surprise presidential election was the
support of the Basij Resistance Force, a paramilitary force with extensive
links to the Revolutionary Guards Corps. 
    The new president, with virtually no experience in foreign affairs when
he was elected, named a senior Basij leader as a top adviser just after
assuming office in August. 
    
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