Iran Takes Steps to Enrich Uranium
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, Oct. 6, 2004
TEHRAN, Iran Iran has produced "a few tons" of the gas
needed to enrich uranium, a top nuclear official said Wednesday,
confirming the country has defied international demands and taken a
necessary step toward producing nuclear fuel - or nuclear weapons.
Uranium hexafluoride gas is the material that, in the next
stage, is fed into centrifuges used to enrich uranium. Uranium
enriched to a low level is used to produce nuclear fuel to generate
electricity and enriched further can be used to manufacture atomic
bomb.
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Iran said last month that it has started converting about 40
tons of raw uranium being mined for enrichment, plans the
international community specifically said it found alarming. Iran
maintains its intentions are peaceful energy purposes.
"We have converted part of the raw uranium we had and produced
a few tons of uranium hexafluoride gas," said Hossein Mousavian,
Iran's chief delegate to the International Atomic Energy Agency
told The Associated Press in an interview. He would not specify how
much.
A few tons of raw uranium would produce nearly the same amount
of hexafluoride gas.
"We are not in a hurry to do it. The few tons of uranium gas
we've produced is an experimental process, not industrial
production," Mousavian said.
Mousavian, who also heads the Foreign Policy Committee at Iran's
powerful Supreme National Security Council, said the process was
under IAEA's full supervision.
"Every stage of the process is under full IAEA supervision. The
agency knows of every milligram of uranium converted," he said.
Iran has thus far said it is honoring a pledge not to put
uranium hexafluoride gas into centrifuges, spin it and make
enriched uranium.
Last month, the IAEA's board of governors unanimously passed a
resolution demanding for the first time that Iran freeze all work
on uranium enrichment including conversion. It specifically
expressed alarm at Iranian plans to convert the more than 40 tons
of raw uranium into uranium hexafluoride.
At the time, the board suggested Iran might have to answer to the
U.N. Security Council if it defied the demands. The resolution said
the next board meeting, scheduled for Nov. 25, would "decide
whether or not further steps are appropriate" in ensuring Iran
complies.
A diplomat familiar with Iran's conversion activities told the
AP in Vienna last month that Iran had stopped at a precursor of
uranium hexafluoride, apparently waiting for a decision from the
leadership to finish the process.
Mousavian was clear Wednesday that Iran had produced the actual
gas.
He said Iran was ready to guarantee that its nuclear program
will not be diverted to a military use and take specific measures
to eliminate concerns about Tehran's nuclear program.
"IAEA is the responsible body for nonproliferation. Iran is
prepared to consider any IAEA proposal to take specific measures
that its nuclear program will not be diverted toward weapons in the
future. The specific measures should be defined by IAEA," he said.
Mousavian warned the international community, not Iran, would
suffer if Iran is referred to the U.N. Security Council and
sanctioned. He reiterated Iranian warnings that Tehran would stop
implementing what is known as the additional protocol to Nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty, which allows unfettered IAEA inspections
of Iranian facilities.
"Referring Iran to U.N. will not change the nuclear capability
we already possess. The victim will be the additional protocol and
NPT [nonproliferation treaty], not Iran," he said.
Mousavian noted Iran had allowed international inspections of
its facilities, including military sites.
"Up to now, Iran has not rejected a single IAEA request for
inspections," he said. "This is the maximum of transparency and
cooperation a member state can have with IAEA."
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