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Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
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Ahmadinejad said to be pushing for open atom work

'Reliable intelligence assessment' obtained by AP says Iranian president wants to continue with developing nuclear weapons openly but is opposed by Tehran's clerical leadership

The end to ambiguity? Iran's president wants to shed the nation's secrecy and forge ahead openly with developing nuclear weapons, but is opposed by the clerical leadership, which is worried about international reaction to such a move, an intelligence assessment hedged Friday.

 

That report, from what the Associated Press called "a nation with traditionally reliable intelligence from the region," could not be confirmed and it contrasts with assessments by other countries that view Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as relatively moderate on the nuclear issue compared to the country's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

 

 

Attempts to interpret Iran's goals are important because as it expands uranium enrichment, it is moving closer to being able to make a nuclear weapon, even as it asserts that it is not interested in such arms and its programs are geared only to making reactor fuel.

 

A US official cited one assessment he has seen suggesting Ahmadinejad may be more "moderate" — more open to talks with the international community on resolving nuclear concerns than Khamenei.

 

Pushing for a bomb

But a blunt comment by Ahmadinejad last month raises questions. While repeating that Iran does not want nuclear arms, he openly reinforced its ability to make them, telling Iranian state TV that "if we want to make a bomb, we are not afraid of anybody."

 

That defiant statement fits the scenario outlined by the intelligence assessment shared with the AP, depicting Ahmadinejad as wanting to move publicly to develop a nuclear program.


The Natanz uranium enrichment facility (Photo: AP)

 

Ahmadinejad is pushing "to shake free of the restraints Iran has imposed upon itself, and openly push forward to create a nuclear bomb," said the assessment, but Khamenei, whose word is final on nuclear and other issues, "wants to progress using secret channels, due to concern about a severe response from the West," the report said.

 

The varying views reflect the difficulties that intelligence agencies face when probing a secretive nation that plays its cards play cards close to vest.

 

Lines of division are murky, alliances shift and positions change, making analyzing Tehran's nuclear end game difficult. Analysts do agree, however, that recent political divisions between Ahmadinejad and Khamenei have spilled over to encompass Iran's nuclear activities to a greater degree than before.

 

Tensions in Tehran, concerns in the West

While much about Iran's nuclear program is opaque, the growing capacity — if not the intention — to make weapons is on the record, captured in International Atomic Energy Agency reports documenting the expansion of Iran's enrichment program from its clandestine beginnings more than a decade ago, to one that has produced enough material for more than two nuclear bombs.

 

More recently Iran has begun enriching to higher levels that would lessen the time needed to make weapons-grade material. And its stonewalling of an IAEA probe based on US and other intelligence of secret work on components of a nuclear weapons program is adding to concerns raised by Tehran's refusal to freeze enrichment despite UN sanctions.

 

Intelligence reports of tensions between Ahmadinejad and the ruling clerics coincide with other signs showing he is at odds with Khamenei.

 

An example of that can be seen in the fact that in recent months, Ahmadinejad apparently fired — and was forced by Khamenei to reinstate — his interior minister in what some analysts see as a rebuffed attempt by the president to eliminate rivals to candidates he would like to see in positions of power.

 

The move prompted an outburst of public criticism and led rivals in parliament to start proceedings that could in the most extreme case lead to impeachment.


At odds with the Ayatollah? (Archives: AP) 

 

Reports of disagreement on nuclear issues predate that dispute, but some officials from member nations of the Vienna-based IAEA see tensions over the future of the nuclear program sharpening.

 

Proliferation expert David Albright of the Institute for Science and International Security said that the latest US intelligence assessment on the Islamic Republic seem to support the notion that Khamenei is worried about how the world would react to a nuclear-armed Iran.

 

"There is a lot of caution in the regime about the implication of building nuclear weapons," Albright said.

 

The Iranian leadership is "worried about starting a nuclear weapons race and worried about the international impact," he added, naming reactions from regional powers Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Turkey as that of greatest concern to Tehran. Both Egypt and the Saudis have indicated that they would contemplate acquiring nuclear weapons if Iran had them.

 

Ready to roll?

One theory voiced by experts is that Iran might be looking to reach the level just short of making nuclear weapons — but able to do so quickly if it feels threatened. That would fit in with Khamenei's reported cautious stance.

 

In any case, Ahmadinejad seems to be further weakened by the dispute, and according to the intelligence assessment, that leaves the Revolutionary Guard as a beneficiary.

 

"Khamenei has decided to transfer engagement with the most sensitive parts of the nuclear program, including activity that can be used for nuclear weapons, from… the group of scientists at the Defense Ministry, who are identified with Ahmadinejad, to a special body in the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corp" the report ventures.

 

"This, due to the increasing lack of trust the Leader has in people in sensitive positions, who are identified with the President."

 

The summary interprets the apparent decision to give the guard greater say over nuclear issues as a boost to its quest "to establish its status as a leading power force in the regime." 

 

 

 

 


פרסום ראשון: 07.22.11, 15:38
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