Iran raises stakes in nuclear row  

   By Paul Reynolds 
World affairs correspondent, BBC News website  


 
Iran's uranium enrichment was carried out at the Natanz plant 
The announcement by Iran that it has for the first time produced enriched 
uranium is significant in two ways. 
First, it shows that Iran has the technical ability to take this essential step 
along the path to making nuclear fuel - a path that could also take it to the 
point where it could make a nuclear bomb, though it says that is not its 
intention. 

Indeed, it says that it enriched only to 3.5%, the level needed for nuclear 
fuel and way below that needed to make a nuclear bomb. Its announcement comes 
much earlier than many experts had expected. 

Second, it raises the stakes in the dangerous diplomatic game that is now under 
way. 

Iran is defying demands made by the UN Security Council in March to suspend its 
enrichment activities and the United States is growing increasingly concerned 
about Iran's long-term intentions. 

Iran's defiance and determination is shown by the fact that it made its 
announcement on the eve of a visit by Mohamed ElBaradei, the director general 
of the UN's nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). 

Mr ElBaradei is making his visit in order to check Iranian compliance with the 
Security Council demand. He now knows what the Iranian answer is. 


Sanctions threat 

So what happens next? 

Mr ElBaradei will report back to the Security Council around the end of this 
month. He will presumably have to say that Iran has failed to suspend its 
enrichment as called for in the council statement last month. 


 
Iran's announcement was timed to coincide with ElBaradei's visit 

The council said that a suspension was necessary to help restore confidence in 
Iran's intentions, which were severely shaken by the discovery in 2002 of a 
secret enrichment programme going back some 18 years. 

The council will then have to consider its next move. There will be those like 
the US, the UK and France who will call for the threat of sanctions. 

However, Russia and China, which both hold vetoes, are against sanctions, 
partly because they do not think they will be effective and partly because of 
their own relations with Iran. 

If the council is inactive, the European Union is likely to consider joining 
the United States, which has imposed trading restrictions on Iran, especially 
against investment in its oil industry, formalised in an Act of Congress in 
1996. 

However, the EU is unlikely go that far. 

Its foreign policy chief, Javier Solana, has drawn up a list of possible 
measures, including travel restrictions on Iranian officials involved in the 
nuclear work, restrictions on dual-use technology that could have military 
applications, a ban on Iranian students studying certain sciences at EU 
universities and possibly a ban on export credits for some companies trading 
with Iran. 

All that, though, has yet to be decided. 


Protracted confrontation 

In the meantime, Iran will presumably carry on with enrichment. 


 
Iran's president is embroiled in a dangerous diplomatic game 

So far it has used only a cascade of 164 centrifuges to produce small amounts 
of enriched uranium. This is obtained by spinning uranium gas until the key 
parts have been separated. 

The process is stopped at a certain point for nuclear power fuel but goes on if 
nuclear bomb material is sought. 

To make quantities sufficient for any use, Iran would need to master the 
technology of using thousands of centrifuges, a plant for which is being built 
next to the pilot project at Nathan. 

If it goes ahead with that effort, and that could take many months, if not two 
or three years, the confrontation will go to an even higher level. 

There is already talk of the US planning a military strike against Iran, even 
if at this stage it appears to be contingency thinking only. 

Iran says it is simply carrying out the rights it has under the Nuclear 
Non-Proliferation Treaty. 

Iran is correct in claiming that right but the treaty also requires a country 
to submit to strict inspections and Iran is refusing to apply the extra 
inspections it agreed with the IAEA some time ago. 

[EMAIL PROTECTED] 


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4901406.stm
 

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