Texarkana Gazette

Images indicate Iran reviving nuke

Satellite pictures show undergroun­d constructi­on, likely for centrifuge assembly

- CHRISTOPH KOETTL

The mysterious July explosion that destroyed a centrifuge assembly hall at Iran’s main nuclear fuel enrichment facility in Natanz was deemed by Iranian authoritie­s to be enemy sabotage and provoked a defiant response: The wrecked building would be rebuilt in “the heart of the mountains,” the head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organizati­on said.

Progress on that pledge, which could shield the facility from an aerial assault or other threats, has been unclear to outside observers. But new satellite imagery is now shedding light on the Iranian plans.

The Visual Investigat­ions team of The New York Times has tracked constructi­on at the site using the new imagery. For the first time, new tunnel entrances for undergroun­d constructi­on are visible under a ridge in the mountain foothills south of the Natanz facility, about 140 miles south of Tehran.

The Times worked with Jeffrey Lewis, an arms-control expert at the Middlebury Institute of Internatio­nal Studies at Monterey in California, to interpret the new image.

“The new facility is likely to be a far more secure location for centrifuge assembly — it is located far from a road and the ridge offers significan­t overburden that would protect the facility from air attack,” Lewis stated in written comments.

The July explosion was not the only recent incident that appeared to have exposed major gaps in Iran’s security of its nuclear program, which the country insists is limited to peaceful purposes. In late November, an attack killed Iran’s top nuclear scientist, Mohsen Fakhrizade­h.

Iran has blamed Israel and the United States for the Natanz explosion and Fakhrizade­h’s assassinat­ion, which were both considered serious setbacks to Iran’s nuclear program.

Lewis described the clues that undergroun­d constructi­on was underway at the site in Natanz.

“There are what appear to be two tunnel entrances on either side of a large ridge, with a pile of spoil from excavation nearby. The space between the two entrances is large enough to accommodat­e a facility about the same size as the centrifuge assembly building that was destroyed this summer and that Iran indicated it was rebuilding in the mountains.”

Looking at satellite images taken over several months allows for tracking changes. Even something as simple and inconspicu­ous as a pile of dirt is a clue.

“The major clue is the pile of spoil from the excavation that was not present in July,” Lewis said. “Iran also regraded a pair of roads on each side of the ridge leading to what appear to be tunnel entrances.”

Allison Puccioni, an imagery analyst affiliated with the Center for Internatio­nal Security and Cooperatio­n at Stanford University, pointed out other telltale signs of excavation­s near the debris pile. In comments, Puccioni said that between the debris pile and excavation site, the imagery showed “trails of excavated earth, lighter in color than the existing hard-packed road.”

A flurry of activity in Natanz captured by satellites in recent months includes the building of new roads and additional excavation­s, which started after the explosion. Researcher­s from AllSource Analysis and the Institute for Science and Internatio­nal Security have previously identified the area and said that additional tunnels are being constructe­d, suggesting work on an even larger undergroun­d complex is underway.

The destroyed building went up in 2012 and had been used to assemble centrifuge­s, the machines that enrich uranium needed for peaceful purposes — and when enriched to higher levels, for bombs. The 2015 nuclear agreement between Iran and world powers halted high level enrichment, but Iran started amassing enriched uranium again after President Donald Trump left the accord two years ago.

After the July explosion, the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, which monitors Iran’s compliance with the accord, confirmed that there had been no nuclear materials at that specific building.

In response to Fakhrizade­h’s assassinat­ion, Iran enacted a law last week to immediatel­y ramp up uranium enrichment and bar internatio­nal inspectors by February if U.S. sanctions are not lifted. The law also calls for the installmen­t of advanced centrifuge­s at its nuclear facilities, including in Natanz.

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