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IAEA can't confirm Iran nuke program is peaceful | The UN nuclear watchdog, International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), has said it can't guarantee that the Iran nuclear program is exclusively for peaceful purposes.
Citing insufficient cooperation from Tehran , the IAEA said Iran could be working
on a nuclear warhead. According to the Christian Science Monitor (CSM), the IAEA
assessment comes as Iran continues to step up uranium enrichment levels and expanding
its nuclear fuel cycle plans. "The agency continues...to verify the non-diversion
of declared nuclear material in Iran, but we cannot confirm that all nuclear material
in Iran is in peaceful activities because Iran has not provided the agency with
the necessary cooperation," Yukiya Amano, the new IAEA chief, told the agency's
governing board at the start of its meeting in Vienna this week. Amano asked for
"clarification of issues related to possible military dimensions to Iran 's nuclear
program," and that Iran make "full implementation of its safeguards agreement
and its other obligations [a] matter of high priority." The tougher IAEA line
comes as momentum builds in Washington to impose more sanctions upon Iran - a
"pressure track" to add to three sets of UN Security Council sanctions and an
array of US and European measures that already target Iran . "The pressure track
does not mean that the engagement track is closed," Glyn Davies, the US Ambassador
to the IAEA, said in a recent Monitor interview in Istanbul . "But we are looking
for Iranian bona fides. There is such an overhang of issues, it would require
a significant change by [the] Iranians," she added. The recent back-and-forth
with Iran over its nuclear program "has been maximally frustrating" because of
the mixed messages from Tehran , said Davies. On Monday, Iran took issue with
Amano's remarks. "We have fully cooperated with the agency. This cooperation will
continue," said Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki. Analysts expect this week's
meeting of the IAEA's governing board to pave the way for a tougher, fourth set
of UN sanctions against Iran as it tussles with the IAEA over unresolved issues
that point to a weaponization effort, but are based on US and Western intelligence
that Iran says is fabricated. Efforts by the Obama Administration to engage Tehran
in 2009 were set back in part by the violence and political paralysis that have
consumed Iran in the aftermath of disputed presidential elections last June. Iran's
top nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili, initially agreed to the deal in Geneva last
October, but was quickly scorned by opposition figures who charged that President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was giving away the "fruit" of Iran's nuclear scientists.
While Amano said on Monday that the deal "remains on the table" and the Iranians
have come back with several compromise options that would avoid a single mass
exodus of LEU and a swap on its territory, Tehran has continued to enrich uranium
to a point where the overall percentage that would leave Iran in the original
deal makes what Amano called the "confidence building" aspect less significant.
Iran insists that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes, though the United
States and European capitals suspect that it masks a nuclear weapons program.
All Iran 's current enrichment is in defiance of UN Security Council resolutions
that require it stop the work until Iran clarifies outstanding issues about possible
weaponization. |
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