Archive for September 7, 2010

U.N. report: Iran stockpiling nuclear materials : Wash Post

September 7, 2010

U.N. report: Iran stockpiling nuclear materials.

Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, September 6, 2010; 7:58 PM

Iran is steadily stockpiling enriched uranium, even in the face of toughened international sanctions, according to a U.N. inspection report that raises new concerns about the ability to monitor parts of the Islamic nation’s nuclear program that could be used to make a bomb.

Citing a broad pattern of obstruction, the International Atomic Energy Agency said Monday that it cannot confirm quantities of certain nuclear materials, has a growing list of unanswered questions about enrichment sites and disagrees sharply with Iran’s recent decision to eject two inspectors.

Overall, the agency “remains concerned about the possible existence in Iran of past or undisclosed nuclear related activities involving military organizations,” according to the report, including the possible “development of a nuclear payload for a missile.”

The report estimates that Iran has accumulated about 2.8 tons of low enriched uranium – material that, if further refined, could be used to make as many as three nuclear bombs – and suggests that Iran is making headway toward uranium that is weapons-grade.

So far this year, Iran has produced about 50 pounds of uranium enriched at 20 percent purification levels, according to the report. Iran had not previously exceeded purification rates of roughly 5 percent. A level of 90 percent is generally considered to be weapons-grade.

Iran says that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes, but U.S. and other Western officials say that Tehran is pursuing a weapon.

Experts said the report, a quarterly update sent to the 35 member nations of the atomic agency as well as the U.N. Security Council, suggests that Iran is becoming more aggressive in denying inspectors answers about and access to nuclear sites.

“The thing that stands out more and more is how Iran is not cooperating, [even on] inspections under traditional rules,” said David Albright, a former weapons inspector and president of the Institute for Science and International Security. While Iran has long kept aspects of its program hidden, Albright said, “what you’ve seen over the last year is that Iran is making it difficult for the IAEA to do its job at declared sites.”

The report describes a series of recent developments at the main declared site, Natanz. Last month, Iran informed the agency that it had underestimated the accumulation of nuclear material there and that it had mistakenly broken seals on materials or equipment.

The IAEA said that it has not been granted access to a heavy water production plant, forcing it to rely solely on satellite imagery to assess the plant’s operations. The agency said it also has been denied information about plans for new enrichment facilities that Iran has said it intends to build.

In a recent reply, Iran said that “it would provide the agency with the required information ‘in due time,’ ” according to the report. Tehran has previously argued that it is not obligated to disclose even the existence of such facilities until they are completed.

U.S. officials suspect that Iran is pushing its nuclear program as far as it can under U.N. inspections, with an aim of giving the nation’s leaders the option to quickly reconfigure facilities to rush forward the production of a bomb.

Iran says, for example, that it is enriching uranium at 20 percent levels to produce fuel rods for a medical research reactor. But U.S. officials say Iran’s explanation is implausible, in part because it doesn’t have the sophistication to work with medically useful fuel rods.

Despite Iran’s ongoing work, U.S. intelligence agencies have recently concluded that it would take about a year, even under a rushed scenario, for Iran to develop a bomb.

Al Arabiya | IAEA worried about possible Iran nuclear missile

September 7, 2010

Middle East News | IAEA worried about possible Iran nuclear missile.

The reactor building at the Russian-built Bushehr nuclear power plant in southern Iran
The reactor building at the Russian-built Bushehr nuclear power plant in southern Iran

VIENNA (Agencies)

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) remained concerned about possible activity in Iran to develop a nuclear payload for a missile, according to a report published Monday.

Iran’s total production of low-enriched uranium has risen by around 15 percent since May to reach 2.8 tons, the report said, showing Tehran is pushing ahead with disputed work despite tougher sanctions.

The agency rejects the basis upon which Iran has sought to justify its objection
IAEA report

The IAEA also voiced concern about what it called Iran’s “repeated objection” to the agency’s choice of inspectors working in the country, after Tehran barred two U.N. nuclear inspectors from entering in June.

“The agency rejects the basis upon which Iran has sought to justify its objection,” the report said, also referring to earlier cases where Iran raised such objections.

“It is also concerned that the repeated objection to the designation of experienced inspectors hampers the inspection process and detracts from the agency’s ability to implement safeguards in Iran,” it added.

Western powers are likely to see the report’s findings as backing up their suspicions that Tehran is seeking to build nuclear bombs and underlining the need for the country to enter serious negotiations to curb its nuclear program.

Meanwhile, the report indicates that Syria’s lack of cooperation with United Nations nuclear inspectors is hampering the IAEA’s ability to determine whether the Middle Eastern country was building a nuclear reactor.

With the passage of time some of the necessary information concerning the Dair Alzour site is further deteriorating or has been lost entirely, the IAEA added.

After two years of the investigations constrained by Syrias lack of cooperation, it is critical that Syria positively engage with the agency on these issues without further delay.

Iran’s response

In response, Iran said that the latest report by the UN atomic watchdog over its nuclear programme tarnishes the agency’s reputation but reiterates the non-military nature of Tehran’s atomic drive.

“After seven years of continuous inspections, this report stresses that Iran is not diverting nuclear material toward military and prohibited objectives,” Tehran’s envoy to the IAEA, Ali Asghar Soltanieh, was quoted as saying by Mehr news agency.

“Although this report has tarnished the agency’s technical reputation… it is clearly evident that all Iran’s nuclear activities, particularly (uranium) enrichment is under the supervision of the agency,” he said.

Soltanieh said the report demonstrates Iran’s achievement and dominance over nuclear technology, while “showing Iran’s commitment to the regulations of the agency’s statutes and safeguards.”

Qassam lands outside Sderot

September 7, 2010

Qassam lands outside Sderot – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Color Red alert sounds throughout city, Sha’ar Hanegev Regional Council in wee hours of the night; rocket lands just outside city limits

The residents of Sderot and Sha’ar Hanegev Regional Council had a rude awakening in the middle of the night, as a Color Red alert sounded just after 2 am.

Shortly afterwards an explosion rocked the area. It was later confirmed that a Qassam rocket fired from northern Gaza landed in an open area just outside Sderot city limits.

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Residents reported seeing mass security forces movement at the direction of the presumed landing site. No injuries or damage were reported.

Rocket fire from northern Gaza renewed just as the Washington peace summit was getting underway, as did terror attacks against Israelis in the West Bank.

IAEA: Syria stonewalling threatens nuclear probe

September 7, 2010

IAEA: Syria stonewalling threatens nuclear probe – Israel News, Ynetnews.

UN agency slams Damascus for failing to provide documents related to suspected nuclear site bombed by Israel in 2007, refusing to allow inspectors access to it

Reuters

P{margin:0;} UL{margin-bottom:0;margin-top:0;margin-right: 16; Syria’s refusal to allow UN inspectors access to a desert site where secret nuclear activity may have taken place is endangering potential evidence in the investigation, the International Atomic Energy Agency said.

It has been over two years since the IAEA was allowed to inspect the site, bombed to rubble by Israel in 2007. Syria, an ally of Iran, denies ever having an atom bomb program.

“With time, some of the necessary information may deteriorate or be lost entirely,” the IAEA chief Yukiya Amano wrote in a confidential report obtained by Reuters.

US intelligence reports have said the site, known as either al-Kibar or Dair Alzour, was a nascent North Korean-designed nuclear reactor to produce bomb fuel.

Earlier this year the IAEA gave some weight to suspicions of illicit atomic activity at the site by saying that uranium traces found in a 2008 visit by inspectors pointed to nuclear-related activity.

“The features of the building and its connectivity to adequate cooling are similar to what may be found at a nuclear site,” the latest report said.

The agency wants to re-examine the site so it can take samples from rubble removed immediately after the air strike.

Amano urged Syria to cooperate and criticized it for failing to provide documents related to Dair Alzour and making only statements “limited in detail” about it.

He also repeated a call for IAEA access to three other Syrian sites under military control whose appearance was altered by landscaping after inspectors asked for access.

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Washington’s envoy to the IAEA said last month a “number of countries” were beginning to ask whether it was time to invoke the IAEA’s “special inspection” mechanism to give it the authority to look anywhere necessary in Syria at short notice.

The agency last resorted to special inspection powers in 1993 in North Korea, which still withheld access and later developed nuclear bomb capacity in secret.

The IAEA lacks legal means to get Syria to open up because the country’s basic safeguards treaty covers only its one declared atomic facility, an old research reactor.

Americans wake up to Islamism

September 7, 2010

Lion’s Den: Americans wake up to Islamism.


What began as a local zoning issue has morphed into a national debate with potential foreign-policy repercussions.

The furor over the Islamic center variously called the Ground Zero mosque, Cordoba House and Park 51 has large implications for the future of Islam in the US and perhaps beyond.


The debate is as unexpected as it is extraordinary. One would have thought that the event that made Islam a national issue would be an act of terrorism. Or the discovery that Islamists had penetrated the US security services. Or the dismaying results of survey research. Or an apologetic presidential speech.

But no, something symbolic roiled the body politic – the prospect of a mosque in close proximity to the World Trade Center’s former location.

What began as a local zoning issue has morphed into a national debate with potential foreign-policy repercussions.

Its symbolic quality fit a pattern established in other Western countries: Islamic coverings on females spurred repeated national debates in France from 1989 onward.

The Swiss banned the building of minarets. The murder of Theo van Gogh profoundly affected the Netherlands, as did the publication of anti- Muhammad cartoons in Denmark.

Oddly, only after the Islamic center’s location had generated weeks of controversy did the issue of individuals, organizations and funding behind the project finally come to the fore. Personally, I do not object to a truly moderate Muslim institution near Ground Zero; conversely, I object to an Islamist institution being constructed anywhere.

Indeed, building the center in such close proximity to Ground Zero, given the intense emotions aroused, will likely redound against the longterm interests of Muslims in the US.

THIS NEW emotionalism marks the start of a difficult stage for Islamists in the US. Although their origins as an organized force go back to the founding of the Muslim Student Association in 1963, they came of age politically in the mid-1990s when they emerged as a force in US public life.

I was fighting Islamists back then, and things went badly. It was, in practical terms, just Steven Emerson and me versus hundreds of thousands of Islamists. He and I could not find adequate intellectual support, money, media interest or political backing.

Our cause felt hopeless.

My lowest point came in 1999, when a retired US foreign service officer named Richard Curtiss spoke on Capitol Hill about “the potential of the American Muslim community” and compared its advances to Muhammad’s battles in seventh-century Arabia. He flat-out predicted that, just as Muhammad had prevailed, so too would American Muslims.

While Curtiss spoke only about changing policy toward Israel, his themes implied a broader Islamist takeover of the US. Disconsolate, I could not fight his prediction.

But 9/11 provided a wake-up call, ending Emerson’s and my sense of hopelessness. Americans reacted not just to that day’s horrifying violence, but also to the Islamists’ outrageous insistence on blaming the attacks on US foreign policy, their blatant denial that the perpetrators were Muslims, and the intense popularity of the attacks among Muslims.

Scholars, columnists, bloggers, media personalities and activists became more knowledgeable about Islam, developing into a community focused on the Islamist threat, a community that now feels like a movement.

The Islamic Center controversy represents the movement’s emergence as a political force, offering an angry, potent reaction inconceivable just a decade ago.

The energetic push-back of recent months finds me partially elated: Those who reject Islamism and all its works now constitute a majority and are on the march. For the first time in 15 years, I feel I may be on the winning team.

But I have one concern: the team’s increasing anti-Islamic tone. Misled by the Islamists’ insistence that there is no such thing as “moderate Islam,” my allies often fail to distinguish between Islam (a faith) and Islamism (a radical utopian ideology aiming to implement Islamic law in its totality). This amounts not just to an intellectual error but a policy dead-end. Targeting all Muslims conflicts with basic Western notions, lumps friends together with foes, and ignores the inescapable fact that Muslims alone can offer an antidote to Islamism. As I often note, radical Islam is the problem, and moderate Islam is the solution.

This lesson learned, the defeat of Islamism can come into sight.

The writer (www.DanielPipes.org) is director of the Middle East Forum and Taube distinguished visiting fellow at the Hoover Institution of Stanford University.

Barak signs military deal with Russia

September 7, 2010

Barak signs military deal with Russia.

Israel and Russia made history on Monday, signing for the first time a military agreement that will increase cooperation on combating terrorism and the proliferation of nuclear weapons, but also could lead to the sale of Israeli weaponry to the Russian military.

Defense Minister Ehud Barak and his Russian counterpart, Anatoly Serdyukov, signed the agreement during a ceremony in Moscow. Later in the day, Barak met with Prime Minister Vladimir Putin at his private residence in Sochi.

Russia is particularly interested in acquiring Israeli unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). In 2009, Russia bought 12 drones from Israel Aerospace Industries, following its war with Georgia, during which Georgian military forces used Israeli Elbit Systems Hermes 450 UAVs.

The Russian army is training 50 soldiers to operate the 12 pilotless aircraft, Interfax reported.

Israel recently put plans to establish a joint venture with Russia to manufacture UAVs on hold, amid concerns regarding the transfer of sensitive technology.

On Monday, Serdyukov said, following his meeting with Barak, that it was important to borrow experience and know-how from the Israeli armed forces for the modernization of Russian armed forces.

Barak’s visit to Russia comes amid Israeli concerns regarding Moscow’s sale of advanced military technology to Syria and Iran.

Israel is particularly worried by a deal to supply Syria with advanced supersonic P-800 Yakhont cruise missiles, which would pose a major threat to Israel Navy ships if transferred to Hizbullah. During the 2006 Second Lebanon War, Hizbullah hit the Israel Navy missile corvette ‘Hanit’ with an Iranian-supplied surface-to-sea missile, killing four sailors.

Barak said that Russia was an important world power and played a dominant and influential role in the Middle East. He briefed Serdyukov and Putin on Israel’s strategic standing in the region and the way it views the various threats it faces, particularly from Iran, Syria and Lebanon.

The two defense ministers agreed to meet again soon, either in Israel or Russia.

“Security issues are our No. 1 priority,” Barak said. “We will not compromise on Israel’s security.”

AP contributed to this report.

UN report: Iran has enough uranium for three nuclear devices

September 7, 2010

UN report: Iran has enough uranium for three nuclear devices – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

IAEA report raises concerns over Iran’s rejection of IAEA decisions regarding identity of nuclear program inspectors and says Iran has prevented inspectors from entering nuclear sites.

By Yossi Melman

Iran has accelerated its nuclear program and currently possesses a sufficient supply of enriched uranium to make three nuclear devices, assuming it speeds up enrichment to 90 percent, according to a new report by the International Atomic Energy Agency.

The report was presented ahead of a discussion by the IAEA board of governors, as well as the organization’s General Assembly, which will meet in Vienna this month.

Iran nuclear plant in Bushehr, AP Technicians measuring parts of Iran’s Bushehr nuclear power plant in this undated photo.
Photo by: AP

According to the findings, Iran currently has 22 kilograms of uranium enriched at levels of 20 percent, and a total of 2.8 tons of uranium enriched at 3.5 percent. The material is being supervised by IAEA inspectors and Iran cannot make use of it for military purposes without this being known to the international community.

The report raises concerns, however, over what is described as Iran’s consistent rejection of the IAEA decisions regarding the identity of the inspectors, and points out that in June Iran prevented two inspectors it did not like from entering its nuclear sites.

Iran’s efforts to interfere in the organization’s ability to inspect its nuclear sites are also highlighted in the report, which essentially suggests that Tehran is following a predetermined path – that Western intelligence services have argued is aimed at achieving military nuclear capabilities.

Experts say the recent batch of sanctions are not deterring Tehran from its goal. Both Israeli and American intelligence organizations believe that if Iran continues to progress technologically at this pace, it will acquire military nuclear capability by 2014.