http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/02/26/AR2011022601
070_pf.html

 

In setback, Iran to unload fuel from nuclear plant

The Associated Press
Saturday, February 26, 2011; 7:24 AM 

TEHRAN, Iran
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/iran.html?nav=el>  --
In a major setback to Iran's civil nuclear program, a senior government
official says technicians will have to unload fuel from the country's first
nuclear power plant because of an unspecified security problem. 

The vague explanation raised questions about whether the mysterious computer
worm known as Stuxnet might have caused more damage at the Bushehr plant
than previously acknowledged. 

The removal of fuel rods from the reactor core of the newly completed plant
could also have been caused by routine technical difficulties. 

Ali Asghar Soltanieh, Tehran's envoy to the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency in
Vienna, was quoted by Iran's ISNA news agency as saying that the step was
demanded by Russia
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/russia.html?nav=el> ,
which provided the fuel. 

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information.
AP's earlier story is below. 

VIENNA (AP) - The U.N. nuclear monitoring agency said Friday that "recently
received" information is adding to concerns Iran may have worked on
developing nuclear arms. 

At the same time, a report by the organization - The International Atomic
Energy Agency - noted that Tehran continues to stonewall its attempts to
follow up on that information, which points to possible experiments with
components of a nuclear arms program. 

The report also said conversion work of uranium ore to the gas from which
enriched uranium is made remained idle for the 18th month, indicating a
possible shortage of the raw material on which Tehran's nuclear program is
built on. 

A new intelligence report from an IAEA member country shared with The
Associated Press says Iran is expanding its covert global search for raw
uranium. It divulged a secret visit by Iranian Foreign Minister Akbar Salehi
last month to uranium-rich Zimbabwe in search for the metal. 

Iran denies any shortage, but the intelligence assessment is line with
international assessments that Iran's domestic supplies cannot indefinitely
sustain an expanding nuclear program. 

An annex to Friday's confidential IAEA report listed "the outstanding issues
which give rise to concern about possible military dimensions to Iran's
nuclear programme." It included design work on a nuclear payload;
experiments with explosives that could detonate such a payload and other
work that could be linked to making weapons. 

The list contained no new information, with much of its contents based on
material that first surfaced seven years ago on a laptop United States
intelligence agencies say was spirited out of Iran by a defector. A senior
international diplomat familiar with the report said it was annexed to
summarize suspicions for the 35-IAEA board member nations the report was
meant for. 

Still, the listing was unusual. Part of a longer annex of "areas where Iran
is not meeting its (international) obligations," it also appeared to reflect
IAEA frustrations that Iran has rejected its attempts to follow up on the
allegations since August 2008. 

New intelligence continues to come in to the agency strengthening those
suspicions, despite Tehran's stonewalling, said the report, obtained by the
AP. 

"Based on the agency's analysis of additional information since August 2008,
including new information recently received, there are further concerns
which the agency also needs to clarify with Iran," said the report, which
was also sent to the U.N. Security Council. 

Tehran is under four sets of U.N. sanctions for its refusal to stop uranium
enrichment - which can create both nuclear fuel and fissile warhead material
- and other instances of nuclear defiance. It insists its program is
peaceful and meant only to power a future generation of reactors. 

Iran's enrichment work was stopped for a day in November, apparently by a
Stuxnet virus attack suspected to have come from Israel
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/israel.html?nav=el>
or the United States. 

Its total stockpile of low-enriched uranium nonetheless grew by more 400
kilograms (more than 800 pounds from October to a total 3,610 kilograms
(almost 8,000 pounds) now. That is more than enough for two simple nuclear
weapons, should Tehran decide to enrich to higher, weapons grade levels, and
indicates that the cyber attack setback was temporary. 

While the report did not specify how recent its new information was on
possible weapons programs experiments, the senior international official
said the agency received fresh intelligence within the last three months. He
asked for anonymity because his information was confidential. 

"Iran is not implementing a number of its obligations including ...
clarification of the remaining outstanding issues which give rise to
concerns about possible military dimensions to its nuclear programme," said
the report. 

"Iran is not providing the necessary cooperation to enable the Agency to
provide credible assurance about the absence of undeclared nuclear material
and activities in Iran, and therefore to conclude that all nuclear material
in Iran is in peaceful activities." 

 



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