IAEA Head Mohamed ElBaradei: Iran is building knowledge, situation is
deteriorating. We are unable to inspect Iranian facilities
Yaakov Lappin
LUXEMBOURG - The international community and Iran are "heading towards
confrontation" over Tehran's nuclear program, Mohamed ElBaradei,
Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
warned Thursday morning.
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ElBaradei was speaking at a two-day conference in Luxembourg aimed at
"preventing nuclear catastrophe," organized by Russian Jewish Congress
Chairman Viatcheslav Kantor.
"Its very difficult to say how close a country is to nuclear weapons,"
ElBaradei said during a press conference. "Iran is expanding its
knowledge and capacity. It now has over 1000 centrifuges. I have
expressed concern over this because the Agency is unable to conduct a
robust and full inspection," he added.
"My current priority is to carry out a comprehensive inspection,"
ElBaradei said, adding that he estimated Iran was "three to eight
years" from being capable of producing nuclear weapons.
The IAEA chief has come under criticism in recent days for suggesting
that Iran has made so much progress on its nuclear program that the
world should accept as "fact" that Iran will have the independent
ability to enrich uranium.
On Wednesday, the IAEA released a report saying Iran was operating 1600
centrifuges independently. US officials have described the report as
"alarming," while Iran said the report was "devoid of any new points."
"We could end up with a major confrontation," ElBaradei reiterated.
"Iran needs to listen to the international community and suspend
enrichment, but the international community also needs to engage Iran.
We need a comprehensive settlement," he added, saying, "the status quo
is unacceptable."
The IAEA head added that the issue represents "an emerging threat in a
region that is in an absolute mess right now."
Nuclear weapons expert Mark Fitzpatrick told Ynetnews that ElBaradei's
estimates may be too optimistic. "If everything goes smoothly for Iran,
it will be 2 - 3 years away from being able to produce nuclear
weapons," he said. "It seems Iran is on track to having 3000
centrifuges by the middle of this summer. It will take them about a
year to get a hold of the technical issues and another year to enrich
the uranium, hence my estimate of two years," he added.
Fitzpatrick noted that up until 2003, no less than 10 indicators were
found to strongly suggest that Iran's nuclear program had a military
purpose. "After 2003, all those signs stopped," he said. "Did the
Iranians stop? Or is it more secretive? There's no reason to believe
they stopped," he added.
'Attack on Iran would be catastrophic'
Meanwhile, speaking to Ynetnews, former UN weapons inspector Hans Blix
said a military strike on Iran would be a "catastrophic" option.
Blix, who is currently Chairman of the Weapons of Mass Destruction
Commission, said previous military operations at nuclear programs, such
as Israel's strike on Iraq's Osirak plant in 1982, served to slow the
nuclear program, but added that only a "durable occupation or regime
change" could ensure that the program is not restarted.
"In all likelihood, an attack on Iran would be catastrophic," Blix
said, adding that the strike would rally support for Iranian President
Ahmadinejad.
Original
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