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Iran's Ahmadinejad. Defying West
Photo: AP
Bushehr nuclear facility
Photo: Reuters

Iran will inform IAEA on new nuclear sites when ready

Senior diplomat, involved in nuclear talks with West, says Islamic republic has no intention to cooperate with UN nuclear watchdog beyond its safeguards

Iran will inform the United Nations nuclear watchdog on progress in its 10 new uranium enrichment plants only six months ahead of injecting gas into the sites which it plans to build, the state news agency said on Friday.

 

In a major expansion of its nuclear program and in retaliation for last week's International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) resolution, Tehran said on Sunday it would build 10 more uranium enrichment sites like its Natanz IAEA-monitored underground one.

 

The IAEA resolution, passed last Friday, censured Iran for covertly constructing a second enrichment plant near the holy city of Qom, demanding a construction halt.

 

A senior Iranian diplomat, involved in nuclear talks with the West, said Iran had no intention to cooperate with the agency beyond its safeguards, the official IRNA news agency reported.

 

"According to the safeguards, after installation of equipments (centrifuges) and only 180 days ahead of injecting gas into centrifuges ... we should inform the IAEA," Abolfazl Zohrehvand told IRNA.

 

"And we will act within the framework of the safeguard," said Zohrehvand, Iran's former ambassador to Italy.

 

The United States and Germany warned Iran on Thursday, saying Tehran was rapidly approaching a December deadline to accept a UN-brokered nuclear deal with Western powers.

 

Iran rejected the deal, calling on the country to send some 75% of its Low-Enriched Uranium (LEU) to Russia and France to be turned into fuel for a Tehran medical research reactor.

The West hoped that farming out a large amount of Iran's LEU reserve for reprocessing into fuel will minimize the risk of Iran's refining the material to high purity suitable for bombs.

 

Iranian hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Wednesday Iran would purify its uranium stockpile to the level needed for Tehran medical reactor, seen as a step toward the highly enriched uranium needed for a nuclear warhead.

 

In talks with six world powers in Geneva on October 1, Iran agreed in principle to the deal but has since balked. Iran has until the end of the year to agree to it or face the threat of tougher sanctions.

 

US President Barack Obama's efforts to engage Iran with confidence-building measures have so far been fruitless.

 

Ahmadinejad ruled out further talks with six major powers on Iran's atomic work, which the West fears is a cover to build bombs. Iran denies the charge.

 


פרסום ראשון: 12.04.09, 11:19
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