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Iran's Nuclear
Ambitions - No More Illusions
The decision by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to
refer Iran's nuclear program to the UN Security Council (SC) has not
put an end to illusory rhetoric about that country's ultimate
intentions. Iranian spokesmen and Iran's apologists continue to use
slogans defending Iran's "inalienable right" to a comprehensive
nuclear program and to insist that "more time is needed for
negotiations." And indications are that the SC, at least at this
stage, will probably confine itself to a "Presidential Statement"
that will not do much to stop Iran from further nuclear
development. The main reason for this largely ineffective course of
action is the unwillingness of Russia and China, each for its own
reasons, to take any forceful measures against Iran. There is no
reason to expect that these maneuvers will lead to any decisive
outcome. IAEA safeguards activities have been greatly constrained by
Iran's abandonment of the Safeguards Additional Protocol (AP) and
any ongoing verification activities in Iran will now be based on the
"comprehensive" safeguards that have been in force since 1974 and
have already been exposed as wholly inadequate in the case of Iran
as well as in those of Iraq and Libya. Besides, Iran could conceal
facilities even if implementation of AP were to be resumed.
Consequently, there is no way that the IAEA will be able to declare
with any confidence that Iran is free of undeclared activities and
materials.
The main thrust of Iranian diplomacy has been to play for time and
even now there is a risk that SC-centered diplomatic activities
focused on reinstituting a full suspension of enrichment-related
activity in Iran will come at the cost of postponing any other
action aimed at forcing Iran to abandon its military nuclear
program. And any "compromise" that permits Iran to carry out any
uranium enrichment research activities, even minimal, would
facilitate larger-scale development at a later stage, eventually
culminating in the production of military-grade enriched uranium.
Iran does not need the full-scale enrichment facility at Natanz to
achieve this. It needs only few thousand gas-centrifuge machines
that can be installed and run within a relatively brief period of
2-3 years. After that, only about one more year would be needed to
produce the first nuclear explosive core. Moreover, this estimate
depends on the assumption - disputed by some analysts -- that Iran
does not have a parallel concealed enrichment operation. Therefore,
any timetable longer than that could well be an optimistic delusion.
Iran and its supporters ground Iran's right to enrich uranium in
Article IV of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), which
states: "Nothing in this Treaty shall be interpreted as affecting
the inalienable right of all the Parties to the Treaty to develop
research, production and use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes
without discrimination." In principle, this means that Iran, like
any other signatory to the Treaty, can do whatever it wishes, as
long as it does not produce nuclear weapons, and that it can enrich
uranium to whatever degree it decides - provided that it adheres to
the provisions of the Treaty and complies with its safeguards
agreement. But Iran has failed to do that. In particular, it has
violated Article II of the NPT, which states: "Each
non-nuclear-weapon State Party to the Treaty undertakes. not to seek
or receive any assistance in the manufacture of nuclear weapons or
other nuclear explosive devices" (emphasis added). As reported by
the IAEA, "Iran has shown the Agency more than 60 documents said to
have been the drawings, specifications and supporting documentation
handed over by the intermediaries, many of which are dated from the
early- to mid-1980's. Among these was a 15-page document describing
the procedures for the reduction of UF6 to metal in small
quantities, and the casting of enriched and depleted uranium metal
into hemispheres, related to the fabrication of nuclear weapon
components." This provides only one confirmed example of the
substantial assistance Iran received for its nuclear program, in
contravention of its Treaty obligations. Another relates to Article
III, which states: "Each non-nuclear-weapon State Party to the
Treaty undertakes to accept safeguards . [that] shall be applied on
all source or special fissionable material in all peaceful nuclear
activities ..." The IAEA points to a contravention of this
obligation when it cites Iran's "failure to report: .the import of
natural uranium in 1991, and its subsequent transfer for further
processing; .[and] the use of imported natural UF6 for the testing
of centrifuges at the Kalaye Electric Company workshop in 1999 and
2002, and the consequent production of enriched and depleted uranium
(DU)." In other words, Iran has clandestinely enriched uranium and
could - had the violation not been exposed -- have eventually
produced nuclear weapons-grade enriched uranium without the world
being aware of it. Thirdly, Article 17 (1) of the Vienna Convention
on the Law of Treaties (the "Treaty on Treaties") states that ".
the consent of a State to be bound by part of a treaty is effective
only if the treaty so permits or the other contracting States so
agree." Since there was no such agreement by the other states, the
Treaty as a whole is in effect, and Iran received no dispensation to
choose which NPT articles to obey and which to disregard. And by
contravening parts of the Non-Proliferation Treaty, Iran has
forfeited the legal right to rely on other parts of it to advance
its purposes. In other words, Iran has alienated its so-called
"inalienable right," and those inclined to grant Iran the right to
develop enrichment technologies, including the Director General of
the IAEA, are challenging both the letter and the spirit of the NPT.
These violations should dispel the illusion the Iran's nuclear
program is peaceful. There may have been grounds to argue that
Iran's posture (including concealment activities) might have been
insufficient for an indictment at the beginning of the "Iran affair"
but inspections subsequently produced technical evidence of
violations that discredits any such argument. Iran can get all the
nuclear energy it says it needs without indigenous enrichment, and
much more cheaply, at that. The only remaining illusion is that
Iran is not unequivocally bent on achieving a military nuclear
capability, and only a far more determined and unified international
response will prevent it from succeeding.
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