Muscat Daily

Iran says 60 per cent enrichment in response to Israel’s ‘nuclear terrorism’

-

There are many, many things to develop a bomb and there is not much evidence that they have done that

ROBERT KELLEY

Tehran, Iran - Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani said on Wednesday its decision to boost uranium enrichment to 60 per cent was a response to arch-foe Israel’s ‘nuclear terrorism’ against its Natanz facility.

Tehran starting advanced centrifuge­s and producing more highly refined uranium ‘is a response to your malice’, Rouhani said in a message aimed at the Jewish state.

“What you did was nuclear terrorism,” he said in televised remarks, referring to a blast early on Sunday that knocked out electricit­y at its main nuclear facility in central Iran. “What we do is legal.”

Israel has neither confirmed nor denied involvemen­t but public radio reports in the country said it was a sabotage operation by the Mossad spy agency, citing unnamed intelligen­ce sources.

Rouhani noted that Iran’s security bodies were yet to provide a final report but that the incident appeared to be a ‘Zionists’ crime’.

Iran’s envoy to the UN’s Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, Kazem Gharibabad­i, wrote on Twitter that preparator­y steps to allow enrichment to higher purity had started and that ‘we expect to accumulate the product next week’ from centrifuge­s at Natanz.

Iran’s announceme­nt of stepped-up enrichment has cast a shadow over talks in Vienna aimed at salvaging the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers that then US president Donald Trump abandoned three years ago.

The step will bring Iran closer to the 90 per cent purity threshold for military use and shorten

its potential ‘breakout time’ to build an atomic bomb - a goal the Islamic republic denies.

‘You cannot stop us’

Israel has often vowed it will stop Iran from ever building an atomic bomb, which it would regard as an existentia­l threat.

It is strongly opposed to US President Joe Biden’s efforts to revive what it regards as a flawed nuclear agreement between Iran and the UN Security Council’s five permanent members plus Germany.

The accord, agreed when Biden was vice president to Barack Obama, promised Tehran relief from punishing sanctions in return for agreeing to limits on its nuclear programme.

The United States said on Tuesday it stood by Israel but remained committed to the Iran talks despite Tehran’s enrichment plan.

Rouhani asserted that Israel with the alleged sabotage attack had aimed to deprive Iran of its leverage during the Vienna talks, saying: “You want our hands to be empty during negotiatio­ns, but we will go there with fuller hands.”

Iran had decided on the more advanced centrifuge­s and higher-level enrichment so that Israel ‘would understand that you cannot stop us’ from using nuclear technology, he said.

‘Very provocativ­e’

Rouhani also again pledged that Iran’s nuclear activity will ‘certainly be peaceful’ and remain under IAEA supervisio­n.

Iran has said it requires the more highly enriched uranium for medical purposes. Gharibabad­i said in his tweet that the new material ‘will improve significan­tly both the quality and quantity of radiopharm­aceutical products’.

Under the nuclear deal, Iran had committed to keep enrichment to 3.67 per cent, though it had stepped this up to 20 per cent in January.

Robert Kelley, a former IAEA director of inspection­s, described the leap to 60 per cent as ‘very provocativ­e’, in comments to AFP.

As well as increasing the purity levels, Iran had greatly increased the number and performanc­e of centrifuge­s, making them ‘bigger, better, faster’, he said.

In total, the number of these machines increased from 5,060 before the 2015 deal to more than 6,400 in February.

Kelley also noted, however, that Iran was not making military-grade uranium as "no one in his right mind is trying to make a bomb with 60 per cent".

“There are many, many things to develop a bomb that don’t involve making uranium - all the mechanical components, high explosives, electronic­s - and there is not much evidence that they have done that,” the former IAEA chief inspector said.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani speaks during a Cabinet meeting, in the capital Tehran on Wednesday
(AFP) Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani speaks during a Cabinet meeting, in the capital Tehran on Wednesday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman