UN Nuclear Inspectors In Iran To Visit Site

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ALI AKBAR DAREINI | 10/25/09 11:20 PM | AP

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TEHRAN, Iran — U.N. inspectors entered a once-secret uranium enrichment facility with bunker-like construction and heavy military protection that raised Western suspicions about the extent and intent of Iran's nuclear program.

The visit Sunday by the four-member International Atomic Energy Agency team, reported by state media, was the first independent look inside the planned nuclear fuel lab, a former ammunition dump burrowed into the treeless hills south of Tehran and only publicly disclosed last month. The inspectors are expected to study plant blueprints, interview workers and take soil samples before wrapping up the three-day mission.

No results from the inspection are expected until the team leaves the country, but some Iranian officials hailed the visit as an example that their nuclear program was open to international scrutiny.

"IAEA inspectors' visit to Fordo shows that Iran's nuclear activities are transparent and peaceful," the official IRNA news agency quoted lawmaker Hasan Ebrahimi as saying.

Another test of Iran's cooperation is fast approaching, however. Iran has promised to respond this week to a U.N.-brokered deal to process its nuclear fuel abroad – a plan designed to ease Western fears about Iran's potential ability to produce weapons-grade material.

The current inspection of Iran's second enrichment site came about a month after Tehran disclosed its existence in a letter to the IAEA, the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog. The notification to the U.N. agency came just days before President Barack Obama and other Western leaders claimed Iran has been hiding the facility from the world for years.

After Iran's disclosure, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad that "the burden of proof is on Iran" to convince the international community its nuclear program is peaceful.

Iran says that by reporting the existence of the site voluntarily, it "pre-empted a conspiracy" by the United States and its allies who were hoping to present the site as evidence that Iran was developing its nuclear program in secret.

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But the IAEA says Tehran should have reported it before it started construction. And the new facility, about 20 miles (30 kilometers) north of the holy city of Qom, immediately raised suspicions about the aim of the nuclear program – which Iran claims is only for peaceful research and energy production. The site is reached by tunnels and is protected by military installations including missile silos and anti-aircraft batteries, Iranian officials said last month.

Iran says the facility – known as Fordo after a village believed to have the largest percentage of fighters killed in the 1980-88 war with Iraq – was fortified to protect against any possible attack by the United States or Israel.

Officials say the plant won't be operational for another 18 months and would produce uranium enrichment levels up to 5 percent, suitable only for peaceful purposes. Weapons-grade material is more than 90 percent enriched.

Iran says its other known enrichment facility – a much larger industrial-scale plant in Natanz in central Iran – is also only to produce nuclear fuel and not at levels for weapons. But many experts say the enrichment centrifuges could be expanded and upgraded to make weapons-grade material.

Another worry for the West is Iran's plans to install a more advanced type of centrifuge at the Fordo site, capable of enriching uranium several times faster and with higher efficiency.

Iran also has promised to respond later this week on U.N.-drafted proposal to have its nuclear fuel processed in Russia, which would limit Iran's stockpiles and allow more international controls.

Although Iran has not given its official answer on the proposed nuclear deal – discussed last week after talks in Vienna with the United States, France and Russia – there are increasing doubts that Iran's leadership will come on board.

On Saturday, Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani claimed the West was trying to "cheat" Iran under the deal that would ship most of Iran's uranium to Russia for reactor-ready enrichment.

Larijani, the country's former nuclear negotiator, said Iran prefers to buy the nuclear fuel it needs for a reactor under construction that makes medical isotopes.

He did not specifically address the fuel needs for Iran's planned full-scale reactor, but Russia is required to provide fuel as part of an agreement to build it for Iran in the southern city of Bushehr. The reactor is nearly operational.

Rejection of the U.N. deal would force the United States and its allies to either return to talks or step up demands for greater economic sanctions and seek to further isolate Iran.

The four-member delegation from the International Atomic Energy Agency is led by Herman Nackaerts, director of IAEA's division of operations department of safeguards. The inspectors are expected to stay three days in Iran.

They are expected to compare Iran's engineering plans with the actual layout of the plant, interview employees and take environmental samples to check for the presence of nuclear materials.

The small-scale site is meant to house no more than 3,000 centrifuges – much less than the estimated 8,000 machines at Natanz.

A recent satellite image provided by DigitalGlobe and GeoEye shows a well-fortified facility built into a mountain about 20 miles northeast of Qom, with ventilation shafts and a nearby surface-to-air missile site, according to defense consultancy IHS Jane's, which did the analysis of the imagery. The image was taken in September.

GlobalSecurity.org analyzed images from 2005 and January 2009 when the site was in an earlier phase of construction and believes the facility is not underground but was instead cut into a mountain. It is constructed of heavily reinforced concrete and is about the size of a football field – large enough to house 3,000 centrifuges used to refine uranium.

TEHRAN, Iran — U.N. inspectors entered a once-secret uranium enrichment facility with bunker-like construction and heavy military protection that raised Western suspicions about the extent and i...
TEHRAN, Iran — U.N. inspectors entered a once-secret uranium enrichment facility with bunker-like construction and heavy military protection that raised Western suspicions about the extent and i...
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What a surprise on the part of Iran (I don't think) coming as one US commentator described that country on Press TV (an Iranian state television company and was promptly aired) as a fascist theocracy.

I wonder what the reaction of Fox News and the other US elctronic media would have been if it was an Iranian commentator attempting to do the same on their channels?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:15 AM on 10/26/2009
- mcmutter I'm a Fan of mcmutter 103 fans permalink
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When the inspectors visit Israel and count their hundreds of nuclear weapons we will have some real news.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:19 AM on 10/26/2009
- cavegal I'm a Fan of cavegal 224 fans permalink
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That would be news and a bona fide miracle.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:24 AM on 10/26/2009
- vinny I'm a Fan of vinny 77 fans permalink
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good report on israel nuclear activities­....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vxim7cx39bc

personally, i think the development of israeli Jericho 3 missiles gives us a very strong reason for demanding IAEA inspections within a framework of economic sanctions that other countries have been subjected to...

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:27 AM on 10/26/2009
- KIVPossum I'm a Fan of KIVPossum 57 fans permalink
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Israel has worked so hard to set up an attack on Iran. If they don't get it, they will be peod. They need to call Colin Powell out of retirement and send him to the UN.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:59 AM on 10/26/2009
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I was in the audience on Feb. 10, 2007 when Dr. Phyllis Bennis, journalist, author, analyst, and activist on Middle East and UN issues for many years stated:

"Iran has signed the NPT, which allows them the right to have nuclear power and to enrich uranium. The 185 non-nuclear states have agreed to give up the right to have nuclear weapons and the five nuclear powers that signed the NPT agreed to get rid of their nuclear weapons. Iran is not in violation of the NPT, but America is! The USA has been in violation ever since the day they signed it. The USA is acting like a rogue state."

http://www.wearewideawake.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1381&Itemid=224

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:57 PM on 10/25/2009

I remember this story reported on our mainstream media networks claiming Iran was caught developing and operating a Nuclear material development factory. They contradicted the fact that Iran volunteered the disclosure and only afterwords did the administration claim they knew about it all along. Also note he picture of an operating facility being inspected, implying the facility is already operating even though the facility is not operational for 18 months.

More propaganda for war just like the runup to the Iraq war. I don't believe Obama is change we can believe in when it comes to war mongering, health care reform, transparancy in government, and fixing the economy espicially corrupt Wall Street

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:56 PM on 10/25/2009
- Khirad I'm a Fan of Khirad 290 fans permalink
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Also note the Qom facility possibly dates back to the 90's.

In the future, please specify by what you mean when you say war. I hope you seriously don't believe invasion and occupation is entailed. Heck, even in their non-bravado, candid interviews, Iranian officials recognize how foolish it would be to attack with even missile strikes. Now, should Israel go ahead with our implicit support, that is more feasible, at least.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:25 PM on 10/25/2009
- vinny I'm a Fan of vinny 77 fans permalink
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agreed... israelis are the ones to worry about... they have nukes and have threatened iran several times... they've been so immersed in war for so long, war has just become a part who they are... they are a warmongering people in a way... engaged in a slow, silent campaign for living space... their militancy and treatment of neighbors is becoming eerily similar to the national socialists parties of the 30s and 40s... not the same, but enough parallels can be made, i think, that it's time israel reflect on its history and rise above its own angst and start caring for others in this world.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:46 AM on 10/26/2009
- mulegino I'm a Fan of mulegino 60 fans permalink

This is obviously a ploy on the part of those crafty Iranians to deflect criticism from themselves onto the only peace loving democracy and U.S. best friend in the Middle East. How dare those Iranians cooperate with the IAEA? We must strike them immediately, before any further cooperation leads to, God forbid, an agreement!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:57 PM on 10/25/2009
- Hajji I'm a Fan of Hajji 13 fans permalink
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Stop dithering.­..ATTACK!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:14 PM on 10/25/2009
- Mollabaji I'm a Fan of Mollabaji 17 fans permalink

delightful sarcasm. Keep going.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:15 AM on 10/26/2009
- Horst I'm a Fan of Horst 24 fans permalink

Ahmadenijad looks like works at a bagel factory

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:18 PM on 10/25/2009
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We all know what Netanyahu is up to. We can be sure that he has the whole of Jerusalem in his sites and won't give up until it is under Israeli control. Negotiations are only a public face that Israel wears before it expands eastward to the Jordan.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:59 AM on 10/25/2009

Whether the US allows inspectors or not, Iran is still a huge threat to stability in the Middle East. Saudi Arabia will not take Iranian nukes lightly, neither should the US or Israel.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Totx7J1nf8U

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:59 AM on 10/25/2009
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Israel has some 200 or so that should be surrendered if they expect Iran not to defend themselves.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:54 AM on 10/25/2009

PhillipB,
The only threat to the Middle East is Israel, and it's stooge the United States. Any country that has Israel or the U.S. for a neighbor, and doesn't have nuclear weapons is living on borrowed time.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:02 AM on 10/25/2009
- Shomali I'm a Fan of Shomali 2 fans permalink

You must be drinking the cool aid made and brewed in Tel Aviv if you think anyone even the most western oriented Saudi's think Iran is more of a threat to them with or without nukes than Israel having hundreds of thermonuclear bombs and wouldn't hesitate to use any weapons on Arabs as they have in Gaza.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:44 AM on 10/25/2009
- courtb I'm a Fan of courtb 19 fans permalink

Obviously.­..that's why there has been the threat of an arms race in the ME since the 1950s...oh wait, that hasn't happened until Iran started pursuing nuclear power.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:31 PM on 10/25/2009
- sparkey I'm a Fan of sparkey 10 fans permalink
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If the U.S. wanted TRUE transparency, our government would want the U.N. to also inspect all U.S. plants. You know, just to make sure we weren't doing anything illegal. It only seems fair. If we want the U.N. to do it to Iran, then we should want them to do it to us, right?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:49 AM on 10/25/2009

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