Iran’s Slowing of Enrichment Efforts May Show It Wants Deal – NYTimes.com
Iran’s Slowing of Enrichment Efforts May Show It Wants Deal – NYTimes.com.
By DAVID E. SANGER and JAMES RISEN
WASHINGTON — By subtly putting its hands on the brakes of its uranium enrichment efforts, Iran may be signaling that it wants to avoid a direct confrontation over its nuclear program, at least in the near term, according to United States and other Western officials. The action has also led some analysts to conclude that Iran’s leaders are showing signs that they may be more interested in a deal to end the nuclear standoff with the West.
Evidence began emerging last summer that the Iranians were diverting a significant portion of their medium-enriched uranium for use in a small research reactor, converting it into a form that cannot easily be used in a weapon.
One American official said the move amounted to trying to “put more time on the clock to solve this,” characterizing it as a step “you have to assume was highly calculated, because everything the Iranians do in a negotiation is highly calculated.” Israel’s departing defense minister, Ehud Barak, came to a similar conclusion when he said in October that his country could safely back away from threats of military action against Iran, at least until the late spring or summer of 2013.
But White House, State Department and Pentagon officials all cautioned against drawing firm conclusions about Iran’s ultimate intentions.
A new session of talks involving Iran and six major powers, including the United States, is expected next year, and American officials say they still cannot determine whether Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, is ready to strike a deal.
A quiet feeler seeking direct talks with Iran that the administration put out after President Obama’s re-election last month resulted in “no real response,” another senior official said, adding: “It wasn’t that they said yes or no. They said nothing.”
These uncertainties underlie the hunger in Western countries to understand why Iran appears to be keeping its stockpile of medium-enriched uranium — which could be converted to bomb fuel in weeks or months — to a level below the amount necessary to build a single weapon.
Evidence from a variety of sources, including the International Atomic Energy Agency, suggests that as Iran produced more uranium enriched to near 20 percent purity, a process that takes it most of the way to bomb-grade fuel, it began diverting some into an oxide powder that could be used in a small research reactor in Tehran. That diversion is believed to have begun in August.
Iran had been complaining for years that the research reactor, which was supplied by the United States during the rule of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi to produce isotopes for medical purposes, was running out of fuel, and that the West refused to sell it more. So it decided to make the fuel itself. Now, even though it has enough fuel to keep the reactor running for at least a decade, it may be making more, several sources indicate.
The statistics released in quarterly reports by the atomic energy agency show that if Iran had not diverted fuel to that project, it would have enough medium-enriched fuel for one bomb and would be on its way to enough for a second. Instead, as of the agency’s last report, in November, Iran had enriched 232 kilograms (about 511 pounds) of the fuel, nearly enough to produce a weapon. But more than 96 kilograms (almost 212 pounds) had been sent off for fabrication into fuel plates for the reactor. Once turned to that purpose, the fuel is very difficult to use in a bomb.
The diversion “was a move to take heat away so that things didn’t go over the tipping point,” said Olli Heinonen, the former head of inspections for the atomic energy agency, who dealt with Iran extensively. Mr. Heinonen, now a senior fellow at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard, said that since the diversion, the Iranians had continued to produce about 15 kilograms (about 33 pounds) a month of medium-enriched fuel. So unless they slow that pace, or divert more fuel to the reactor program, “they are going back up to the tipping point,” he said.
Iran could use that to its advantage in negotiations. “I think it is hard to understand what Iran was doing if not sending a deliberate signal, signaling some cautiousness,” said Greg Thielmann, a former State Department intelligence analyst who is now at the Arms Control Association. “I think it is reasonable to see the diversion as a negotiating signal, and a note of moderation.”
Ray Takeyh, an Iran specialist at the Council on Foreign Relations, said that “the sanctions policy that the United States has pursued over the past decade is beginning to bear fruit.” He said that the steps, which have led to a huge devaluation of the Iranian currency and a sharp decline in Iranian oil exports, “have seemingly succeeded in convincing influential sectors of the theocracy to reconsider their options.”
Some Arab officials agree, though they warn that it could be three years before the sanctions hurt Iran enough to bring about a change of position. “The problem is we don’t have three years,” a senior Arab diplomat said recently.
The big question is whether any of this is more than tactical positioning. “Tehran almost certainly hopes the diversion will be read in Western capitals as a sign of its willingness to reach a deal,” said Paul R. Pillar, a former C.I.A. analyst who is now at Georgetown University.+
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December 28, 2012 at 2:04 PM
The strategical iranian position is so weak and it has so many wholes in it, that even if Iran will throw all its uranium to trash, it wont save the day for Iran. Iranian entering into the syrian mud was a fatal error for Iran.
December 28, 2012 at 4:06 PM
your right more Iranian rubbish there last days are coming and they know it no amount of bullshit will change this
December 28, 2012 at 6:50 PM
In the mean time another year has passed and an attack on Iran in 2013 is just as likely as it was 6 years ago, when Iran started enriching uranium. But don’t give up hope, Luis !
December 29, 2012 at 9:48 AM
You really got it wrong this time, old-timer . My last months thoughts here are telling clear that no open action will be taken against Iran, if Iran won’t severely blunder. So all is good. Peace, man.
December 28, 2012 at 5:01 PM
Iran is truly in a quagmire with Syria. They managed to do the same to the US, so for now they deserve a taste of their own crap. But, let’s not stop there for this is only the beginning of the horrific events that lie ahead for Iran….of course, that’s just my opinion. I could be entirely wrong. And since we’re now on the subject of my opinion, I believe the New York Times is a corrupt piece of crap and would not even use it to line the bottom of my pet parakeet’s cage.
Oh yeah, I hope everyone had a good time and a lot of good food for the holidays. I know I did. Now I’m back on a diet.
December 28, 2012 at 6:31 PM
There’s a reason that leftist media outlets like the NYT keep losing money. People see through their BS.
December 28, 2012 at 10:25 PM
I have this feeling that despite all the sound and fury from Netanyahu, Israel will accept a nuclear Iran and hope for the best.
Perhaps there is faint hope that despite all the same apocalyptic noise from Iran’s clerical leadership- they will love their own children more than they hate Israel.
December 29, 2012 at 4:14 AM
Bullshit ! Since the “emergency” stop of Busher allowed them to retrieve enough plutonium for two dozens atomic bombs, there is absolutely nothing to negotiate. Within the next two or three months they can destroy the USA and Europe with a couple of EMPs.
The situation is much more critical than in the summer of 1939 before Hitler attacked the rest of Europe. A couple of EMPs would create dozens of Fukushimas in Europe and in the USA, destroying our DNA forever through total irradiation. Iran can put an end to Western Civilization in the coming weeks. And a large part of the corrupt Western elites want to negotiate with Iran !? The American Empire is in a much more pathetic and scandalous state than the Roman Empire at its degenerate twilight, as it was about to be destroyed by barbarians. It is the same problem every time : the elites live in absolute luxury, thus becoming weaker and weaker, and fight wars only through unmotivated mercenaries who cost far too much money. Before World War II started, both Churchill and De Gaulle were despised by the elites of their countries. The elites will not have the luxury of finding a couple of great leaders once the new Hitler attacks the USA and Europe with a couple of EMPs. It will be an instantaneous game over. Our lives will become far worse than those of the poorest Africans. And there will be no escape from radiation, since it will only take a few years for dozens of Fukushima-like meltdowns to irradiate the whole planet and destroy the DNA of most species.
December 29, 2012 at 5:07 PM
1939 your right there the Emp,i think irans going to get it before they get the chance,as for meltdowns thats highly unlikely in europe and the usa,what s likely is the Arabs and Iranians will get wiped out
December 30, 2012 at 4:02 AM
In a nuclear showdown, Iran would not stand a chance. Not even for a nanosecond. Can you imagine how many nukes are just offshore from Iran as we speak. Every carrier, every sub, every destroyer, and every other missile carrying ship in the US Navy in that region is armed with nukes. You can bet any Iranian ass on it. Launch to detonation would only take minutes, maybe even seconds.