Posted on 06/14/2005 11:51:03 PM PDT by nickcarraway
VIENNA -- The UN atomic agency's investigation of Iran will continue as Iran has failed to provide "sufficient" information on crucial questions about uranium-enriching centrifuges and nuclear smuggling, the agency's chief said on Tuesday.
Mohamed ElBaradei also said that Iran had not given access requested by the IAEA to the Lavizan and Parchin military sites, where diplomats say that weaponization work is suspected.
Diplomats said that the agency had also requested but had been denied access so far to interview key officials such as Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, a brigadier general who has worked at Lavizan.
Information is lacking over how close Iran is to being able to use sophisticated centrifuges for enriching uranium as well as its links to international nuclear smuggling, ElBaradei told a meeting of the 35-nation board of governors of his International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
Speaking after being elected on Monday to a third four-year term as IAEA director general, ElBaradei, 62, said that the IAEA investigation of Iran would continue, even if progress was being made on some fronts.
"Iran has provided some additional documentation and information, which are not yet sufficient to answer several remaining questions," ElBaradei said.
His comments came as Iran was seeking to have a more than two-year investigation of its nuclear program closed, especially since it is negotiating with the European Union to guarantee that it is not secretly developing atomic weapons and to win trade, security and technology benefits.
Iran says that its nuclear program is peaceful and designed to generate electricity but the United States says that this civilian effort hides a covert atomic weapons program.
ElBaradei, who was elected after the United States dropped its opposition to his candidacy, also formally declared on Tuesday his support of a US proposal "to establish a committee to consider ways and means to strengthen the safeguards system".
ElBaradei said that the IAEA had set up a similar committee in 1996 to fix weaknesses in monitoring Iraq's nuclear program.
Now "revelations such as the discovery of additional undeclared nuclear programs aided by covert nuclear supply networks and the risk associated with nuclear terrorism have confronted the agency's verification system and the nonproliferation regime in general with unprecedented challenges", he said.
ElBaradei's deputy director general for safeguards Pierre Goldschmidt is later in the week to provide a detailed briefing to the board on the current state of the Iran investigation.
ElBaradei said that the IAEA "is making progress on one of the two key remaining issues, namely the origin of the low and high enriched uranium contamination on equipment at various locations in Iran".
The agency is working to establish whether highly enriched uranium (HEU) that its inspectors have found in Iran is from imported equipment, as Tehran claims, or from Iranian manufacture of such potentially weapons-grade nuclear material.
A diplomat close to the IAEA said that the tests on centrifuge parts supplied by Pakistan tend so far to support Iran's claim that the contamination was from imported equipment.
But the diplomat said that the tests had not been concluded.
The other main remaining issue is the IAEA's investigation of Iran's acquisition of P-2 centrifuges, which are speedier than earlier models in enriching uranium that can be used to make fuel for civilian nuclear reactors but can also make up the explosive core of atom bombs.
The issue involves the nuclear technology and materials black market run by disgraced Pakistani scientist Abdel Qadeer Khan, and which supplied Iran, as well as Libya and North Korea.
ElBaredei said that the IAEA continued to press Tehran for "additional documentation regarding offers of equipment made to Iran, as well as for information on associated technical discussions between Iran and intermediaries in the procurement network", a reference to the international black market in smuggling nuclear materials and information.
ElBaradei said that the IAEA had asked Iran "to reach agreement on modalities, currently under discussion, that would provide the agency with access to dual-use equipment and other information related to the Lavizan-Shia site and would allow additional agency visits to areas of interest at the Parchin site".
Dual-use equipment can be used either for peaceful or military purposes.
Mullahs-with-nukes ping...
Apparently, Islam has no prohibition against bearing false witness too.
It doesn't matter. The Iranians could build 50 nukes and showcase them in a huge parade in the middle of Tehran on CNN, and there would still be a large segment of the population who would see no reason to go after them.
The war drums keep beating...Saudi Arabia rejects nuclear inspections yet the war drums keep beating for Iran and Syria. 95% of the 9/11 hijackers were Saudi's. Syria pulls back, that's not good enough! The neoconmen keep beating the war drums! Bush's approval ratings are dropping. Wag the Mullah!
Great! No problem! The UN is still on the case! < /sarcasm>
BTT!!!!!!
...and a flurry of reports that OBL is in Iran.
It all seems so strangely familiar of the same musing that were beingb printed about Iraq before we went there. If the world is frightened let them carry the load. We have done enough, and been abused for it. Russia has been supplying them with equipment France has been kissing their butt, Germany and Spain are cowering, and afraid to open their eyes. We dont need another Michael Jackson trial without a verdict here, What we need is incontrovertible proof. Then we destroy that stinking country and half the rest of the Mid-East with the blessing of the rest of the world and be done with it, once and for all. They want nukes let them use one, then we give them all the nukes they want, right down their throats.
I'm afraid to ask "Who else?!"
Good question. Why wasn't there a Buckets Sonovich around to oppose this duplicitous Arab?
The DAY AFTER Iran explodes a Nuke in a terrorist action, ElBaradei will state, "I was just about ready to release my report stating my conclusion that Iran may have nuclear weapons."
creepy crawlys
Thanks for the ping!
I can't believe they're going to put this clown (El Baradei) in for another term as head of the IAEA.
It's there; so like most political givens in life, we work with it to reform it or neutralize it - as the case may be. End of discussion.
Did you say something? I just installed a new BS filter and I need to tweek it.
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