Even before the publication next week of the awaited International Atomic Energy Agency report on Iran’s compliance with international demands for full disclosure of its nuclear program, Britain and France on Thursday evening tabled a draft resolution that would impose a third level of UN Security Council sanctions against Iran.
The U.S. Ambassador to the UN, Zalmay Khalilzad, told journalists in New York on Friday that the six countries that have been working on the Iran nuclear program — the five permanent members of the UNSC (US, Russia, China, Britain and France) + Germany — want to have a vote in the Council to adopt the resolution by next Friday.
Representatives of these six countries will meet in Washington on Monday to discuss strategy.
Iran has not waivered from its insistence that it will produce its own (lightly) enriched uranium as fuel for its future power plants. It has even begun to work with more advanced centrifuge machines that can produce greater quantities of enriched uranium, faster.
Iran argues that, under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), it has the right to develop and acquire advanced nuclear technology for peaceful purposes. The U.S., on the other hand, says that the NPT confers no “right” to enrich.
Iran has apparently hoped that moves towards fully answering all outstanding questions about its previous nuclear programs — these questions have been mostly articulated by the U.S. — could lead to abandonment of the effort to pursue sanctions through the UN Security Council.
Highly enriched uranium used to make nuclear weapons is produced by extending exactly the same process used to make the lightly enriched uranium that Iran is determined to produce, but Iran has insisted it is not pursuing a weapons program.
Suspicions remain, however, and have even intensified.
Israel, in particular, believes that it is not only directly threatened by the current Iranian regime, but that the Iranian leadership is rushing headlong after arms that can be used against the Jewish State, which is widely believed to be an undeclared nuclear weapons power.
It may be that the rush to table and adopt a third layer of UN SC sanctions against Iran is, in part, an attempt to head of Israeli unilateral action against Iran.
The pursuit of an indigenous enriched uranium production capacity, combined with Iran’s feverish development of missile technologies that could deliver a nuclear payload to ever-more-distant targets, have convinced some critics that Iran is covertly pursuing an offensive nuclear weapons program.
The IAEA report has not been made public yet, but it has been leaked to the major news agencies.
The Associated Press reported that “IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei, who drew up the report, said his team had ‘made quite good progress in clarifying the outstanding issues that had to do with
The IAEA report says that Iran continues its work on a heavy-water nuclear facilities.
An earlier AP story stated that the IAEA document said “Teheran had rejected as irrelevant some material forwarded by the agency that purportedly shows it working on tests of missile trajectories and high explosives, and research on a missile re-entry vehicle — activities that would most likely be part of weapons development. Questions also remained on how and why
In mid-February, the U.S. finally turned over to the IAEA evidence that the U.S. has cited but held in reserve since 2005, saying that its release could jeopardize intelligence sources. This evidence was reportedly contained on a laptop computer found in Iran.
This material apparently features prominently in the forthcoming IAEA report. Reuters reported that in the leaked copies, the IAEA said that “
What is particularly galling to Iran is that most of the major damning evidence has been provided by the Iranian exile group, Mujahediin -e-Khalk (MEK), which has fought against the Islamic Republic from Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, and whose fighters are still cantoned in a base area in Iraq. Its leadership is in Paris, and it has been classified by the U.S. as a terrorist group, though relations are maintained, and the U.S. military has protected the MEK fighters inside Iraq.
The NYTimes reported in mid-February that a U.S. National Intelligence Estimate published two months earlier “concluded, with what it terms ‘high confidence’, that Iran was designing a weapon through 2003. But the assessment indicated that Iranian officials ordered the work halted later that year, perhaps because they feared it would ultimately be discovered”. The NYTimes story noted that U.S. President George W. Bush said, in an interview with Fox News, “that he disagreed with the idea that the intelligence estimate lowered the threat from
Apparently after examining this U.S.-provided evidence on the laptop computer, Iranian officials still maintain it is “baseless”, and they say they are scandalized that further UN SC sanctions are being proposed.