http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/11/AR2006041100605.html?referrer=email&referrer=email


Iran Declares Nuclear Advance
Uranium Enriched To New Levels, President Says

By Karl Vick and Dafna Linzer
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, April 12, 2006; Page A01 

ISTANBUL, April 11 -- Iran has succeeded in enriching uranium to new levels, 
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Tuesday, proclaiming a technical 
breakthrough that advances both the country's nuclear program and the 
international controversy surrounding it.

"I'm announcing officially that Iran has now joined the countries that have 
nuclear technology," Ahmadinejad said in a carefully staged presentation 
televised live across Iran. "This is a very historic moment, and it's because 
of the Iranian people and their belief. And this is the start of the progress 
of this country."

Standing before a sweeping backdrop featuring doves around an Iranian flag, 
Ahmadinejad said the country was moving toward enriching uranium on an 
industrial scale to supply nuclear fuel for power plants, not the weapons that 
the Bush administration and other governments say are Tehran's real goal.

"We are saying again that the nuclear technology is only for the purpose of 
peace and nothing else," Ahmadinejad said.

Ahmadinejad's announcement came midway through a 30-day period that the U.N. 
Security Council gave Iran to cease all work toward enrichment, though the 
council threatened no specific punishment if Iran continued. In Washington, 
White House press secretary Scott McClellan said the announcement signaled 
Iran's continued defiance of the international effort to freeze the country's 
nuclear program.

"This is a regime that needs to be building confidence with the international 
community," McClellan said. "Instead, it's moving in the wrong direction."

The head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization said the breakthrough came Monday 
at the pilot enrichment plant in Natanz, where Iran removed U.N. inspection 
seals earlier this year. Gholamreza Aghazadeh said enrichment was to 3.5 
percent, an amount consistent with a fuel cycle and far below the level needed 
to produce a nuclear weapon.

"This achievement has paved the way for Iran to start its industrial-scale 
production and, to enter this stage, we are trying to put in operation a 
complex of 3,000 centrifuges" by mid-March of next year, Aghazadeh said.

The International Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N. nuclear watchdog group, 
confirmed that the Iranians were operating an array of 164 centrifuges, and 
inspectors arriving in Tehran on Wednesday will seek to verify the production 
of a token amount of nuclear fuel. Producing amounts large enough to power an 
electrical plant or -- if enriched long enough -- to make a bomb would require 
several thousand centrifuges, orchestrated in cascades whose constant operation 
poses significant technical challenges.

"This means they can operate a larger cascade, but can they do it for a long 
time? We don't know," said a Western official closely involved in monitoring 
Iran's progress.

Iran had previously enriched uranium to a level of about 2 percent, using a 
smaller cascade, and separately enriched uranium to about 15 percent during 
laser experiments in 2002. Bomb-grade uranium must be enriched to a level of 
well over 80 percent.

IAEA inspectors have monitored much of the work being conducted in Iran during 
frequent visits over the last month, and the cascade of centrifuges is being 
monitored by IAEA cameras. Agency officials told diplomats almost a month ago 
that the Iranians were close to completing the 164-centrifuge cascade and would 
begin testing it with inert gas and then a small quantity of uranium gas. 
Though it is technically possible, most nuclear experts agree it is unlikely 
Iran would be able to make bomb-grade uranium with the 164-centrifuge cascade.

Still, experts and diplomats called enrichment a significant breakthrough in 
Iran's nuclear program. The current effort dates from the late 1980s, when Iran 
was at war with neighboring Iraq, and grew more intense in 2000.

"It is an acceleration of the pace of their technology, which certainly worries 
us," said a European diplomat in Tehran, who spoke on condition of anonymity 
under embassy ground rules. "The bottom line is they completely ignored what 
the rest of the world tells them to do. So they'll have to take the 
consequences, I guess."



A U.S. diplomat was more skeptical. "We don't yet know if it's true or not, and 
getting one little drop doesn't mean much anyhow," the diplomat said on 
condition of anonymity.

Some Western diplomats were awaiting reaction from Moscow and Beijing, whose 
positions will be key to any Security Council response. Others said they were 
waiting to hear more from the Iranians, who might try to reopen negotiations 
with Europe now that Iran has accomplished what it set out to prove.

"We all knew they were going to do this. The question is: What will they do 
next?" said one European diplomat, who also spoke on condition of anonymity.

Mohamed ElBaradei, who heads the IAEA, is scheduled to arrive in Tehran 
Wednesday night to renew talks. Diplomats said they expected Iran to hand 
additional documents over to ElBaradei and to resolve outstanding questions 
about the extent and history of the nuclear program.

Tuesday's presentation by Ahmadinejad, in the ornately tiled museum of Iran's 
holiest shrine in the northeastern city of Mashad, reflected a determined 
effort to strike a balanced tone for domestic and international audiences. In a 
country that writes in Persian, the only writing on the stage -- "Nuclear 
energy is our certain right" -- was in English.

Addressing an Iranian population that complains of having fallen behind in 
economic development over the past quarter-century, Ahmadinejad framed the 
announcement as an epochal scientific achievement, "the start of progress in 
this country." Iran's theocratic government has struggled to control 
perceptions of the nuclear issue, privately warning Tehran newspapers not to 
report on the subject. "The Iran crisis they talk about does not exist in 
Iran," Ahmadinejad said in another recent speech.

On Tuesday, Ahmadinejad advised governments critical of Iran, "Don't create 
hate in the Iranian people's hearts."

"What we are doing today and what we are doing in the future will be in the 
framework of Iranian rights and according to the regulation of all people's 
rights by the International Atomic Energy Agency," Ahmadinejad said. The agency 
has consistently differed on that point, repeatedly citing Iran for withholding 
details of a nuclear enterprise it kept under wraps for 18 years.

"We believe in the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty," the president also 
declared, affirming Iran's membership in a pact Iranian officials have, at 
tense moments, threatened to quit. "We believe in improving international 
regulation. In that respect, we continue our activity toward nuclear technology 
for industrial use."

The statesmanlike tone of Ahmadinejad's speech contrasted sharply with his 
remarks the night before, when the hard-line conservative leader was 
alternately confrontational and magnanimous.

"They know they cannot do a damned thing," Ahmadinejad was quoted by Iran's 
state broadcaster as saying, referring to the Security Council, where permanent 
members Russia and China have proved reluctant to back U.S. efforts to move 
toward imposing sanctions on Iran.

Ahmadinejad that night also called the IAEA "liars in their claim that we have 
breached" its rules, "since we conduct our activities openly."

But even then, he signaled no change in Iran's level of cooperation with the 
agency. "We invite them to come here and see everything personally," he said. 
"We have no hard feelings to anyone."

Linzer reported from New York


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