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Iran Flaunts Low-Level Enrichment
to Conceal High-Powered
Weaponizaton Plant
DEBKAfile Exclusive Report
Debka
Israel
Infosearch:
José Cadenas
Bureau Chief
USA
Research Dept.
La Nueva Cuba
April 21, 2006
Hardline President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejads claim of Iranian success in low-level
uranium enrichment was more bombastic than frank. Before springing
his disclosure at a sacred mausoleum in the northern town of Mashhad
on April 11, DEBKAfiles Iranian sources disclose he paid a
stealthy visit to Neyshabour in Khorassan, 38 kms to the
southeast.
There, he inspected
a project he omitted to mention in his Mashhad speech about low-level
enrichment, namely, a top-secret plant under construction that is
designed to run 155,000 centrifuges, enough to enrich uranium for
3-5 nuclear bombs a year.
This is Project
B, or the hidden face of the enrichment plant open to inspection
at Natanz.
This plant,
due for completion next October, is scheduled to go on line at the
end of 2007. According to our intelligence sources, running-in has
begun at some sections of the Neyshabour installation, which is
located 600 km northeast of Tehran. DEBKAfiles sources reveal
too that the Neyshabour plant has been built 150 m deep under farmland
covered with mixed vegetable crops and dubbed Shahid Moradian,
in the name of a war martyr as obscure as its existence.
Already hard
at work at Irans most ambitious nuclear project are hundreds
of Iranian engineers, experts and assistants under the instruction
of foreign specialists in the technology of centrifuge operation.
Neyshabour is guarded day and night by the special Revolutionary
Guards Corps elite Ansar al-Mahdi unit.
In Moscow Thursday,
April 13, US assistant secretary of state on arms control Stephen
Rademaker calculated that, with 54,000 centrifuges, the Iranians
could produce enough enriched uranium for a bomb in 16 days. He
was referring to the statement by Irans deputy nuclear chief
Mohammed Saeed, who said his government planned to expand its enrichment
program to 54,000 centrifuges from the 164 used in the small scale
process announced Tuesday.
According to
this reckoning, the Neshabour installation, when ready to go in
three years, will have three times the capacity of Natanz and be
able to turn out 9-15 bombs a year.
The clerical
rulers in Tehran have long suspected the Americans or Israelis would
eventually bomb Natanz out of existence. Therefore, four years ago,
they began constructing its mirror - albeit on a far larger scale
in order to push ahead uninterrupted with enrichment for
weapons, regardless of objections from the West, Israel and Arab
neighbors.
Russian experts
completed the initial plans in 2003 and construction began in early
2004. In late 2005, Bulgarian transport planes delivered tens of
thousands of centrifuges from Belarus and Ukraine; they were transported
directly to Neyshabour. In January 2006, 23 Ukrainian engineers
arrived to start installing the equipment, joined in February by
46 Belarusian nuclear experts who are working in shifts to prepare
the 155,000 P-1 and P-2 centrifuges for operation.
This compares
with 60,000 in Nathanz of which 40,000 are accessible for
inspection while 20,000 are hidden in closed subterranean chambers.
Neyshabour,
however, still needs to undergo experimental stages, according to
our Iranian sources. It is far from sure that the Ukrainian and
Belarusian experts will be able to put together a well-synchronized
centrifuge project that is workable in the long term.
The Natanz project
was long slowed by serious malfunctions in running the centrifuges
purchased from Pakistan. They were only partially overcome lately.
Now, Tehran needs three years to work in secret and in peace from
outside interference and international inspections to achieve its
first N-bomb.
Tehrans
success in enriching uranium, announced with fanfare
last Tuesday, actually happened, according to our sources, eight
months ago. Ahmadinejad timed his disclosure to achieve
two goals:
One, as a fait
accompli that would force the world to acknowledge that Iran had
joined the worlds nuclear club as its eighth member, and two,
to signal that the Islamic republic was close to achieving a nuclear
weapon and capable of retaliating forcibly to international threats
of penalties. Teherans grandiose war games two weeks ago were
staged for the same purpose.
Russian and
Chinese sources have their own interpretation of Tehrans motives.
They believe the Iranian presidents announcement was a knee-jerk
reaction to the approaching UN Security Council deadline and the
press reports of an approaching US military strike against its nuclear
facilities. According to their theory, his bellicose stance was
the prelude to a climb-down; Tehran would now announce its national
objective has been accomplished and a line could be drawn on further
advances.
DEBKAfiles
Iranian experts dismiss this theory as contrary to the mind-set
of the Islamic republics rulers. They are convinced that Tehran
sought the universal condemnation it encountered; it proved to the
Iranian public that in a hostile world, Iran is fully justified
in its go-it-alone program for arming their country with a nuclear
weapon.
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