Iran Nuclear NewsReport says nuclear work ongoing in Iran

Report says nuclear work ongoing in Iran

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AP: Iran has expanded its uranium enrichment program instead of complying with a U.N. Security Council ultimatum to freeze it, the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency said Thursday in a finding that clears the way for harsher sanctions against Tehran. Associated Press

By GEORGE JAHN

Associated Press Writer

VIENNA, Austria (AP) – Iran has expanded its uranium enrichment program instead of complying with a U.N. Security Council ultimatum to freeze it, the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency said Thursday in a finding that clears the way for harsher sanctions against Tehran.

“Iran has not suspended its enrichment-related activities,” the International Atomic Energy Agency said in a report.

Although its information was based on material available to it as of Feb. 17, a senior U.N. official familiar with Iran’s nuclear file, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak on the issue, suggested the IAEA’s conclusion remained valid as of Thursday.

The IAEA detailed recent activities showing Tehran expanding its enrichment efforts – setting up hundreds of uranium-spinning centrifuges in an underground hall and bringing nearly 9 tons of the gaseous feedstock into the facility in preparation for enrichment. It added that Iranian officials had informed the agency that they would expand their centrifuge installations to have thousands of them ready by May.

The conclusion – while widely expected – was important because it could serve as the trigger for the council to start deliberating on new sanctions meant to punish Tehran for its intransigence over its nuclear program.

In the report, written by IAEA Director General Mohamed ElBaradei, the agency also said the Islamic republic continues building both a reactor that will use heavy water and a heavy water production plant – also in defiance of the Security Council.

Both enriched uranium and plutonium produced by heavy water reactors can produce the fissile material used in nuclear warheads. Iran denies such intentions, saying it needs the heavy water reactor to produce radioactive isotopes for medical and other peaceful purposes and enrichment to generate energy.

The six-page report also said that agency experts remain “unable … to make further progress in its efforts to verify fully the past development of Iran’s nuclear program” due to lack of Iranian cooperation.

That, too, put it in violation of the Security Council, which on Dec. 23 told Tehran to “provide such access and cooperation as the agency requests to be able to verify … all outstanding issues” within 60 days.

The report – sent both to the Security Council and the agency’s 35 board member nations – set the stage for a fresh showdown between Iran and Western powers.

In Tehran, the deputy head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization, Mohammed Saeedi, said: “Iran considers the (IAEA demand for) suspension as against its rights, the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty and international regulations.”

“That’s why Tehran could not have answered positively to the request by resolution 1737 of the UN Security Council for a suspension of enrichment activity,” Saeedi said, according to the official Islamic Republic News Agency.

State Department spokesman Tom Casey said that Iran’s refusal to curtail its nuclear program is a “missed opportunity” for its government and people. He said he is confident that the Security Council will approve additional sanctions against Iran but declined to predict what they might be.

Before the report was issued, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said the U.S. and its allies would use the Security Council and other “available channels” to bring Tehran back to negotiations over its nuclear program.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he was “deeply concerned … that the Iranian government did not meet the (Wednesday) deadline set by the Security Council.”

“I urge again that the Iranian government should fully comply with the Security Council” as soon as possible, he told reporters in Vienna, saying Iran’s nuclear activities had “great implications for peace and security, as well as nonproliferation of weapons of mass destruction.”

In addition to the sanctions, the U.S. government has been raising the pressure on Tehran on other fronts, from arresting Iranian officials in Iraq to persuading European governments and financial institutions to cut ties with the Islamic Republic.

Rice, speaking in Berlin, said U.S., European and Russian diplomats all want Iran back at the bargaining table.

“We reconfirmed we will use available channels and the Security Council to try to achieve that goal,” she said following a breakfast meeting with her counterparts from Germany, Russia and the European Union.

The Security Council is demanding an immediate and unconditional stop to enrichment, after which European-led negotiations over an economic reward package could begin. Iran has long insisted it will not stop its nuclear activities as a precondition for negotiations.

In moderate remarks Wednesday directed at Washington – the key backer of tougher U.N. action – Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said the dispute “has to be decided peacefully with the United States.”

But other top Iranian officials used harsher language, and none showed signs of compromise on the main demand of the U.S. and other world powers – a halt to enrichment and related activities.

“The enemy is making a big mistake if it thinks it can thwart the will of the Iranian nation to achieve the peaceful use of nuclear technology,” Iranian state TV’s Web site quoted President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as saying Wednesday.

With the United States bolstering its naval forces in the Gulf and cracking down on Iranians within Iraq it says are helping Shiite militias, concerns have grown that Washington might be planning military action.

British Prime Minister Tony Blair said “the only sensible way” to solve the crisis was to pursue political solutions, but that he could not “absolutely predict every set of circumstances.”

Still, “I know of nobody in Washington that is planning military action on Iran,” Blair told BBC radio. “Iran is not Iraq. There is, as far as I know, no planning going on to make an attack on Iran and people are pursuing a diplomatic and political solution.”

The Security Council sanctions targeted Iran’s nuclear and missile programs and persons involved in them.

Discussions on a new resolution aimed at stepping up pressure on Iran to suspend enrichment were expected to start next week, a Security Council diplomat said in New York, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

Part of the sanctions target companies suspected of involvement in Iran’s nuclear program – a measure that an Iranian dissident group said Tehran was circumventing by renaming the companies and otherwise disguising them, or setting up new ones.

The National Council of Resistance in Iran said firms under sanctions that were renamed were the Farayand Technique Co. and the Pars Thrash Co. It named new companies set up to work on Iran’s enrichment programs while avoiding sanctions as Tamin Tajhizat Sanayeh Hasteieh, Shakhes Behbood Sanaat and Sookht Atomi Reactorhaye Iran.

All are headed by Gholamreza Aghazadeh, head of Iran’s atomic energy programs, and some employ others on the Security Council’s list of those involved in Iran’s nuclear program, said the group, the political wing of the People’s Mujahedeen of Iran, which advocates the overthrow of Iran’s Islamic government.

There was no independent confirmation of the information provided by the group, which the U.S. and the European Union list as a terrorist organization. But it has revealed past secret Iranian nuclear activities subsequently verified by the IAEA or governments.

In Tehran on Thursday, 400 students burned British and Israeli flags and urged the government not to scale down the nuclear program.

Associated Press writers Anne Gearan in Berlin and Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations in New York contributed to this report.

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