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Iran Removes Final Seals at Nuclear Site
AP on Yahoo ^ | 8/10/05 | Ali Akbar Dareini - AP

Posted on 08/10/2005 9:51:52 AM PDT by NormsRevenge

ISFAHAN, Iran - Iran removed the final seals from equipment at a uranium conversion plant as U.N. inspectors watched Wednesday, paving the way for Tehran to fully open the facility despite European and U.S. calls for it to maintain the suspension of its nuclear program.

The move came as Europe and the United States were struggling to find leverage to stop Iran from forging ahead with its nuclear program, which Washington says secretly aims to develop nuclear weapons. Iran says its program is peaceful, intended only to produce electricity.

Board members of the U.N. nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, canceled a session tentatively planned for Wednesday in Vienna, Austria, signaling how difficult it was for delegates to agree on how to rebuke Iran.

The United States and some European countries had talked of referring Iran to the U.N. Security Council for possible economic sanctions — but that option was fading over concerns it could backfire by hardening Iran's position. Iran has already said it would rather endure sanctions than back down on a program it says is a matter of national pride.

President Bush said Tuesday he was "deeply suspicious" about Iran's intentions.

Iran began work Monday at its Isfahan Uranium Conversion Facility, 255 miles south of Tehran. But some key units at the plant had remained under IAEA seal since a November suspension in activity.

All the seals were removed Wednesday and the agency said it had a surveillance system in place at the facility to keep tabs on the work.

The head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, Gholamreza Aghazadeh, told state-run television earlier Monday that work would start at the units as soon as the seals were removed, but he didn't specify in his latest comments whether that had happened.

The reopening of the plant is part of a tough new stance Iran is taking over its nuclear program. It suspended all nuclear activities in November to avoid U.N. sanctions and as a gesture in negotiations with the Europeans, who have trying to persuade Iran to limit its nuclear program.

Over the weekend, Iran rejected European proposals offering economic incentives in return for abandoning its uranium processing facilities.

New hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad called the offer "an insult," but he said Iran wanted to continue negotiations and would make its own proposals.

Iran has said it won't resume uranium enrichment — the most crucial part of its program — for the time being. Enrichment can produce either fuel for a nuclear power reactor or material for a nuclear bomb.

The Isfahan facility carries out an earlier stage of the process, converting raw uranium — or "yellowcake" — into uranium hexaflouride gas, UF-6, the feedstock for enrichment.

Before the November suspension, the Isfahan facility converted some 37 tons of yellowcake into UF-4, a preliminary stage. Experts say that amount could yield 200 pounds of weapons-grade uranium, enough to make five crude nuclear weapons.

The seals Wednesday were removed from the unit that converts UF-4 to UF-6, meaning it can now complete the conversion for the 37 tons, as well as convert more yellowcake from scratch.

The seals were voluntary, so IAEA inspectors had no choice but to let them be removed, though Iran allowed the installation of surveillance equipment to ensure no nuclear material is diverted.

Iran insists it has the right under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty to develop the entire nuclear cycle — from uranium ore to fuel for a reactor. But Europe fears that will give it the ability to secretly produce material for weapons.

Europe and the United States were struggling to find a way to get Tehran to back down. Diplomats at the IAEA board of governors held one meeting Tuesday. But a Wednesday session was canceled.

"They need more time," IAEA spokesman Peter Rickwood said. Diplomats were expected to continue negotiations privately on a resolution urging Iran to suspend its latest nuclear activities. Germany said the removal of the seals at Isfahan brought the standoff to a "critical phase of the process."

The German government "hopes Iran will still take the sensible path and look seriously and constructively at the offer from the (Europeans) and return to the so-called 'status quo ante," spokesman Bela Anda said.

France also urged Iran to again suspend the Isfahan plant. "This is necessary to restore the confidence of the international community and to allow for a resumption of negotiations," Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Marie Masdupuy said.

The European proposal offered last week to Iran "remains on the table and we invite Iran to give itself time to study it seriously," Masdupuy added.

The European proposals offered a trade-off: Iran would forgo activities on the nuclear fuel cycle, including conversion and enrichment, and in return Europe would guarantee it a supply of fuel for its reactor program, technical help and economic incentives.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; Israel; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: final; iaea; iran; irannukes; isfahan; nuclear; removes; seals; site
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To: NormsRevenge

What we need right now is a bunch of wacko Iranian eco-terrorists who are also highly motivated homicide bombers to overrun the place and make Chernobyl look like spilt milk!


21 posted on 08/10/2005 1:59:18 PM PDT by Stayfree (Greetings from all of us at FlushHillary.com!!)
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To: QQQQQ
It's enough to make you laugh.

It's in the top 3 at FOX, yet CNN and MSNBC don't even have it on their website anymore.  Guess the "General Lee" is much more important that religious fanatics, who claim to be our enemy, starting up their reactor.

22 posted on 08/10/2005 2:39:00 PM PDT by softwarecreator (Facts are to liberals as holy water is to vampires)
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To: softwarecreator

Warm up the diamond tips!


23 posted on 08/10/2005 4:04:18 PM PDT by samadams2000 (Pitchforks and Lanterns..with a smiley face!)
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To: Semper Paratus

"I bet the UN will issue a stern statement."


Apparently they are not even going that far.

Read this and weep:

News Analysis: Legal basis is elusive for objection to Iran

http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/08/10/news/nuke.php

"The legal case is somewhat thin against Iran," said Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association, a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that researches nuclear issues.

Before the emergency meeting here on Tuesday, European leaders threatened to take Iran before the United Nations Security Council. But diplomats now say this is not on the table at the talks here.

It is widely recognized that Iran did violate international law by hiding its nuclear program for 18 years. But the program was discovered in 2002 and Iran has since cooperated with United Nations inspectors, who have installed cameras in their facilities and make regular visits and reports.

"Some might ask, why are you taking this to the Security Council now? This was discovered three years ago and they've taken corrective action since then," said a Western diplomat, who spoke on the condition that she not be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter.

The difficulties of addressing nuclear questions through the UN system have been on full display here during the emergency meetings called by Britain, France and Germany.

For the second day on Wednesday, diplomats were unable to reach consensus on a resolution addressing the Iranian situation, and the UN agency announced that a meeting of its board of governors had been canceled.


24 posted on 08/10/2005 5:03:04 PM PDT by QQQQQ
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To: NormsRevenge

Nuclear talks with Mullahs will never take the US any where.

It is impossible to change any thing the regime does in Iran through useless nuke talks.

Mullahs love wasting your westerners' time.

The raghead mollas should be dealt with now or it will be late tomorrow!

These Mullas do not trust their own people. Why should the EU or US trust them?


25 posted on 08/10/2005 11:08:48 PM PDT by Khashayar (No Banana Allowed!)
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