Posted on 11/12/2014 5:35:09 AM PST by SJackson
November 24, 2014 is a looming deadline for Iran, Israel, the United States and the world over its nuclear weapons program. Just days ago, the International Atomic Energy Agency [IAEA] released a report summarized by its conclusion:
The Agency is not in a position to provide credible assurances 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. Iran has not provided any explanations that enable the Agency to clarify the outstanding practical measures, nor has it proposed any new practical measures in the next step of the Framework for cooperation.
Under Secretary of State Wendy Sherman, leading the international negotiations, has described the back and forth as a forest of distrust. At the same time, she declares, Our bottom line is unambiguous Iran will not, shall not obtain a nuclear weapon.
In the background, media revelations recently disclosed secret correspondence between the Obama White House to Irans Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei kept even from congressional leaders and Americas closest allies, including Israel. Washington is struggling to enlist Tehran in the faltering campaign against the Islamic State. This process has juggled agreed numbers of centrifuges a limit of 4,000 or is it 10,000 or is it something in between? Centrifuges are a critical component because each vertical cylinder slowly but steadily distills uranium into a highly enriched weapon-ready state.
However, as the world ponders Irans dash to enrich more kilograms of uranium, the underlying concern is not so much about the enrichment process itself, but the end product: a nuclear warhead. Iran has been developing its warhead for some sixteen years. That design is nearly perfected.
Compare the process to gunpowder. To use gunpowder, you need load it into a cartridge, load the cartridge and a bullet into a rifle, and then find a marksman. Iran has nearly mastered all those steps but in nuclear terms.
Four technological achievements are key to completing Tehrans nuclear weapon:
1) accretion of enough nuclear materials, highly enriched to weapons-grade or 90 percent; 2) machining that material into metal for a spheroid warhead so it can fit into a missile nosecone; 3) developing a trigger mechanism to initiate the atomic explosion at a precise moment during missile reentry; and, of course, 4) a reliable delivery system.
Start with the nuclear material. Experts estimate that a single bomb would require approximately 25 kilograms of Highly Enriched Uranium, or HEU, with a U-235 concentration of at least 90 percent. Much of Irans nuclear enrichment remains at 3.5 and 20 percent levels. But the numbers are deceiving. Enriching to 3.5 percent is 75 percent of the task of reaching weapons-grade. Once Iran has reached 20 percent, it has gone 90 percent of the distance. Indeed, Irans President Hassan Rouhani delivered a 2005 speech in his capacity as National Security Advisor in which he declared, a country that possesses fuel cycle technology can enrich uranium and the country that can enrich uranium to about 3.5 percent will also have the capability to enrich it to about 90 percent. Today, Iran possesses enough nuclear material for a fast break-out that would finish the job, creating enough for five or ten bombs, in about six weeks.
Second, that HEU must be metalized and shaped into a dense spheroid compact enough to fit into a missile nosecone. Iran has mastered the metallurgical techniques using other high-density metals such as tungsten, which have been test-detonated in a special chamber to measure their explosive character.
Third, the spheroid must be detonated. Irans warhead design employs a R265 shock generator hemisphere drilled with 5mm boreholes that are filled with PETNpentaerythritol tetranitrate, an organic high explosive favored by terrorists. When triggered with precision, the PETN array can cause a massive synchronized implosion. That will fire an internal exploding bridgewire which will in turn actuate an embedded neutron initiator to detonate the atomic reactionand the mushroom cloud. This sequence of devices has been assembled and tested. Iran has some 500 exploding bridgewires.
Fourth, the warhead must be delivered. The Shabab-3 missile nosecone is large enough to accommodate the warhead. The outer radius of the R265 shock generator-encased warhead is 550 millimeters, less than the estimated payload chamber diameter of about 600 millimeters. Most of all, the Iranian military has selected the Shabab-3 not only because it possesses a range of 1200 kilometers, but because it can be detonated in an airburst some 600 meters off the ground on re-entry. The height of 600 meters was used in the Nagasaki explosion. Such a weapon cannot be crashed into the ground. It must be detonated while still airborne. Iran has a small fleet of Shahab-3 missiles.
Hence, Irans metronomic accretion of nuclear material is not just an ambiguous physics undertaking that should worry the West. It is part and parcel of a nuclear attack plan that the international community is determined to address.
Actually, I’d retitle this to something less misleading.
“The Centrifuges ARE the warhead”

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That will occur to the morons in DC about a milisecond after they see a very bright flash.
Lot of what if’s in Writer Black’s story.
The biggest leap is to test one, not just theorize or test on inert materials. The Persians will not be able to hide a successful test.
To test one nuke successfully or not, would be suicide as the Israelis would no longer take the chance and would justifiably first strike.
To launch one nuke, tested or not, at Israel would be suicide. To launch untested nukes at Israel in quantities capable of preventing retaliation would be pure suicide as Israel would retaliate even if the Iranians shot duds.
Any Iranian nuke would most likely be handed over to their terrorist friends for smuggling into USA.
I hope Obama and his antisemitic supporters (which is not all of his supporters, just far too many of them) will think this through. As much as they hate Jews, isn’t having multiple nukes detonate in Israel too high a price to pay for a few hundred thousand dead Jews?
Iran and Obama are doing everything they can possibly do to insure the destruction of Israel.
Our bottom line is unambiguous Iran will not, shall not obtain a nuclear weapon.
Riiiiiighttt
Iran has far better technology in their quest for the bomb than we had in 1945. They, no doubt, have enough material by now to do as they need.
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