Khaleej Times

Faulty devices help keep Iran in nuclear deal limits, says report

- Reuters

washington — Frequent breakdowns of advanced uranium enrichment devices have inadverten­tly helped Iran comply with restrictio­ns in the internatio­nal agreement curbing its nuclear programme, according to a new report by a Washington-based think tank.

Iranian compliance also is due to tougher policing by United States President Donald Trump’s administra­tion of the 2015 pact to prevent Tehran from developing nuclear weapons, the Institute for Science and Internatio­nal Security said in a report due on Friday.

“Iran can be expected to continue to push the deal’s limits, commit violations and seek interpreta­tions that are unfounded,” the report said.

“One should expect many struggles to keep Iran within the nuclear limits for the duration of the deal.”

For those reasons and because Tehran is unlikely ever to build a financiall­y viable uranium enrichment plant, an expansion of Iran’s programme would either be a “colossal waste of money ... or the basis of a nuclear weapons programme, which would not care about costs,” the report said.

Washington and its negotiatin­g partners in the agreement should find a way to make the deal’s restrictio­ns permanent or “severely” extend their expiration times, it said. Under the deal between Iran, Britain, China, France, Germany,

Iran can be expected to continue to push the deal’s limits, commit violations and seek interpreta­tions that are unfounded. One should expect many struggles to keep Iran within the nuclear limits for the duration of the deal

Report by a US think tank

Russia and the United States, Tehran agreed to restrict its nuclear programme in return for the lifting of economic sanctions that had crippled its economy.

The report comes as Trump weighs whether to certify to Congress that Iran is complying with the agreement. He has until October 16 to make that decision.

Decertifyi­ng Iran could lead Congress to reimpose US sanctions on Iran, threatenin­g to collapse the deal and intensify tension in the Middle East.

Supporters of the deal, called the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, insist that strong internatio­nal monitoring will prevent Iran from developing nuclear bombs. Iran has denied that it is seeking nuclear weapons.

The Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, which monitors the pact, has found no “material breaches” by Iran, a judgment with which Washington has concurred. Tehran has exceeded some deal restrictio­ns, such as a limit on its heavy water stockpile, used in nuclear reactors, the Institute for Science and Internatio­nal Security said in a November 2016 report. But it either rectified some infraction­s or won exemptions — while President Barack Obama was in office — before the pact took effect in January 2016.

In its new report the institute listed other alleged Iran compliance issues, including changes to the design of a heavy water reactor that can produce plutonium, another weapons fuel.

Iran’s improved compliance this year in part has been “unintentio­nal or accidental” because advanced uranium enrichment devices called centrifuge­s have broken during testing more often than expected, according to the think tank report.

Enrichment produces low-enriched uranium for power plants, but it also can make highly enriched weapons-grade uranium.

By August, Iran had tested eight advanced IR-8 centrifuge­s although the deal limits it to one at most, the report said, adding that Iran also operated between 13 and 15 interconne­cted IR-6 machines, which the deal restricts to 10. However, according to the report, all but one of the IR-8s and many of the IR-6s broke because carbon fiber components failed.

David Albright, a former UN nuclear inspector who authored the new report, said Iran’s compliance also had improved because the United States is taking a tougher line on attempts to “violate the nuclear limits and exploit loopholes.”

Two sources, including a senior US official, said on Wednesday that the White House does not want to kill the deal.

Instead, it wants lawmakers to hold off taking action while it discusses with European allies making the limits on Iran’s programme permanent and fixing what US officials consider other flaws, said the sources, who requested anonymity.—

 ?? AP ?? Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani speaks at a military parade marking the 37th anniversar­y of Iraq’s 1980 invasion of Iran, outside Tehran on Friday. —
AP Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani speaks at a military parade marking the 37th anniversar­y of Iraq’s 1980 invasion of Iran, outside Tehran on Friday. —

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