Analysts Say a Nuclear Iran Is Years Away
By WILLIAM J. BROAD, NAZILA FATHI and JOEL BRINKLEY
04/13/06 "New
York Times" -- -- Western nuclear analysts said
yesterday that Tehran lacked the skills, materials and equipment
to make good on its immediate nuclear ambitions, even as a
senior Iranian official said Iran would defy international
pressure and rapidly expand its ability to enrich uranium for
fuel.
The official, Muhammad Saeedi, the deputy head of Iran's atomic
energy organization, said Iran would push quickly to put 54,000
centrifuges on line — a vast increase from the 164 the Iranians
said Tuesday that they had used to enrich uranium to levels that
could fuel a nuclear reactor.
Still, nuclear analysts called the claims exaggerated. They said
nothing had changed to alter current estimates of when Iran
might be able to make a single nuclear weapon, assuming that is
its ultimate goal. The United States government has put that at
5 to 10 years, and some analysts have said it could come as late
as 2020.
The head of Russia's nuclear agency, Sergei Kiriyenko, today
flatly declared that Mr. Saeedi's plans for a quick increase in
production was not realistic.
"Industrial uranium enrichment is out of the question," given
the state of Iran's program, he told Russia's official news
agency.
Still, Iran's announcement brought criticism from several
Western nations and to a lesser degree from Russia and China.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice called for "strong steps"
against Iran, using the country's clear statement of defiance to
persuade reluctant countries like Russia and China to support
tough international penalties.
But Russian officials said they had not changed their opposition
to such penalties. Nuclear analysts said Iran's boast that it
had enriched uranium using 164 centrifuges meant that it had now
moved one small but significant step beyond what it had been
ready to do nearly three years ago, when it agreed to suspend
enrichment while negotiating the fate of its nuclear program.
"They're hyping it," said David Albright, president of the
Institute for Science and International Security in Washington,
a private group that monitors the Iranian nuclear program.
Anthony H. Cordesman and Khalid R. al-Rodhan of the Center for
Strategic and International Studies in Washington called the new
Iranian claims "little more than vacuous political posturing"
meant to promote Iranian nationalism and a global sense of
atomic inevitability.
The nuclear experts said Iran's claim yesterday that it would
mass-produce 54,000 centrifuges echoed boasts that it made years
ago. Even so, they noted, the Islamic state still lacked the
parts and materials to make droves of the highly complex
machines, which can spin uranium into fuel rich enough for use
in nuclear reactors or atom bombs.
It took Tehran 21 years of planning and 7 years of sporadic
experiments, mostly in secret, to reach its current ability to
link 164 spinning centrifuges in what nuclear experts call a
cascade. Now, the analysts said, Tehran has to achieve not only
consistent results around the clock for many months and years
but even higher degrees of precision and mass production. It is
as if Iran, having mastered a difficult musical instrument, now
faces the challenge of making thousands of them and creating a
very large orchestra that always plays in tune and in unison.
Yesterday, Mr. Saeedi, the Iranian nuclear official, said Iran
was moving rapidly toward its atomic goals. "We will expand
uranium enrichment to industrial scale at Natanz," he was quoted
as saying by the ISNA student news agency in a reference to
Iran's main enrichment facility. Mr. Saeedi said Iran would
start operating the first of 3,000 centrifuges at Natanz by late
2006, with further expansion to 54,000 centrifuges. "We have no
problem in doing that," he told ISNA. "We just need to increase
our production lines."
The news from Iran, which holds 10 percent of the world's oil
reserves, has made oil markets very nervous in recent days and
contributed to a spike in oil prices to nearly $70 a barrel on
Tuesday. Oil futures on the New York Mercantile Exchange closed
at $68.62 a barrel yesterday, just $2 short of their record
after Hurricane Katrina.
Since the beginning of the year, the diplomatic crisis has
prompted fears that Iran might be tempted to restrict its oil
sales, provoking a price jump that would cause economic havoc
around the world. Iranian officials have repeatedly said they
might use their country's "oil weapon" in a confrontation with
the West. But, as is often the case in Iranian politics, such
statements were just as rapidly offset by more reassuring
comments from the Oil Ministry that Iran would not use its oil
exports as a bargaining chip with the West.
More realistically, many traders fear that any international
penalties against Iran might hurt Iran's oil industry, slow
investments, or remove sorely needed barrels from oil-hungry
markets.
The Russian stance against penalties highlighted the obstacles
Washington faces in its effort to force a halt to Iran's nuclear
program. A senior aide to President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia
said yesterday that any effort to employ broad penalties against
Tehran would backfire because "Iran's current president will use
them for his benefit, and he will use them to consolidate public
opinion around him."
China announced today that it is sending a high-level envoy to
Tehran and Moscow for talks on the issue, according to Xinhua,
the state news agency. "China is concerned about the statement
by the Iranian side and is worried about the way in which things
are developing," said Liu Jianchao, a Foreign Ministry
spokesman.
The United States is urging members of the United Nations
Security Council to approve travel and financial restrictions on
Iran's leaders, and administration officials view Russia, which
has close trade ties to Iran, as the linchpin of those efforts.
Ms. Rice said yesterday that the Security Council must consider
"strong steps" to induce Iran to change course. "The Security
Council will need to take into consideration this move by Iran,"
she said about Tuesday's announcement. "It will be time when it
reconvenes on this case for strong steps to make certain that we
maintain the credibility of the international community."
In Iran on Tuesday, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced in
an elaborate ceremony that Iranian scientists had enriched
uranium to 3.5 percent — a level of purity that, if enough could
be made, might fuel a nuclear reactor. While Iran hailed the
step as a first, the nuclear experts said Tehran had in fact
been doing periodic enrichment experiments with centrifuges for
seven years, since 1999.
Amid the tensions, Mohamed ElBaradei, the head of the
International Atomic Energy Agency, arrived in Tehran yesterday
for talks with Iranian nuclear officials. Despite the
provocative nature of Iran's statements, he still held out hope
that the government could be persuaded to compromise. "We hope
to convince Iran to take confidence-building measures including
suspension of uranium enrichment activities until outstanding
issues are clarified," Dr. ElBaradei told journalists at the
Tehran airport, Reuters reported.
Mr. Ahmadenijad today declared that Iran would refuse to talk
with Mr. ElBaradei about its right to perform enrichment, and
lashed out again at Western critics. "Our answer to those who
are angry about Iran obtaining the full nuclear cycle is one
phrase, we say: Be angry and die of this anger," he said,
according to the BBC.
Iran's state-run television was dominated by programs about the
atomic claim in what seemed like an organized effort to mobilize
public support for the nuclear program. One channel showed a
reporter stopping people on the street to ask if they had bought
pastry to celebrate the news. Another showed nuclear sites and
uranium mines. Television news said schools celebrated the
success and rebroadcast the announcement of Iran's president
hailing the enrichment step.
While Iran has sharply raised its atomic claims in the past two
days, nuclear analysts said it appeared to be roughly where it
was expected to be on the road to learning how to enrich uranium
on an industrial scale, and still had years of work ahead of it
to attain its ambitious goals.
Mr. Albright of the Institute for Science and International
Security said he was not surprised that the Iranians had got a
group of 164 centrifuges up and running and had begun to
introduce uranium gas into them for enrichment.
"There's still a lot they have to do," he said, to perfect the
operation of the cascade of centrifuges. A report that he and
his colleagues made public late last month suggested that Iran
would need 6 to 12 months to master that process, and Mr.
Albright said in an interview that he stood by that rough
estimate as accurate.
His March report said Iran had parts for perhaps 1,000 or 2,000
centrifuges beyond the ones already in operation, and that Iran
is not likely to produce enough highly enriched uranium to make
a nuclear weapon until 2009 at the earliest.
In Pakistan, Senator Chuck Hagel, a Nebraska Republican who is a
member of the Foreign Relations Committee, told a news
conference at the American embassy in Islamabad that military
action against Iran was unlikely, Reuters reported.
Mr. Hagel said that President Bush was committed to pursuing a
diplomatic solution. Mr. Bush on Monday called news reports of
planning for airstrikes against Iran "wild speculation" and
stressed that he would push hard for a peaceful resolution.
Mr. Hagel said that for him to comment on military action would
also be "complete speculation."
"But I would say that a military strike against Iran, a military
option, is not a viable, feasible option," he said.
John O'Neil and Jad Mouawad contributed reporting from New York
for this article.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company
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