The Independent

Iran says mysterious power cut at Natanz atomic facility is act of ‘nuclear terrorism’

- BORZOU DARAGAHI INTERNATIO­NAL CORRESPOND­ENT

The head of Iran’s atomic energy agency has described mysterious power outage at the country’s main uranium enrichment facility as an act of “nuclear terrorism” by opponents of a diplomatic solution to disagreeme­nt’s over Iran’s nuclear programme.

Ali Akbar Salehi did not specify who might have been behind yesterday’s alleged attack on the Ahmadi

Roshan facility, near Natanz, but he was likely referring to Israel. Iran reserved the right to take action against the perpetrato­rs, he told state television. The sensitive site, in the centre of the country, lost its power supply one day after it was trumpeted by the president and other senior officials as part of an annual commemorat­ion of the nation’s atomic technology achievemen­ts.

The alleged attack also came as US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin arrived in Israel for talks with senior officials, and any alleged operation will likely be seen in the region as US endorsemen­t, even though Washington likely had little do with it.

Iran and the US are struggling to resurrect a 2015 nuclear deal that placed limits on Iran’s nuclear programme in exchange for relief from internatio­nal sanctions. Former president Donald Trump abandoned the deal in 2018 and tightened sanctions, prompting Iran to breach limits that the nuclear pact imposed on its programme.

President Joe Biden wants to return to the deal. Americans along with Iranian diplomats and officials from other nuclear deal signatorie­s including the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Russia and China launched talks in Vienna last week that are to resume on Wednesday.

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu vehemently opposes the deal and has sought to lobby Washington not to resume diplomatic negotiatio­ns with Iran.

“It seems that Israel is taking matters into its own hands to show there are other ways to stop Iran’s advances besides diplomacy,” says Mark Fitzpatric­k, a former US State Department nonprolife­ration specialist. “The Israeli leadership thinks this diplomatic gambit is a fool’s errand, and they they have other ways to stop Iran’s march to a nuclear bomb.”

On Saturday, Iran’s president and other officials had unveiled what they described as 133 new achievemen­ts in the field of nuclear physics, including centrifuge­s which once perfected can more efficientl­y and quickly purify uranium and produce fissile material that can be used to power an electricit­y plant or, if highly concentrat­ed, build an atomic bomb.

During the ceremonies, state television aired a video clip of Iranian singers dressed as scientists performing a patriotic song amid what appeared to be cascades of nuclear centrifuge­s. But experts say Iran often exaggerate­s its advances for propaganda purposes.

“Iran has been making pretty steady progress in developing more and more advanced centrifuge­s, but how well they work and how much of a leap forward they are is uncertain,” said Mr Fitzpatric­k. “The fact that Iran has been working on so many different kinds of centrifuge­s suggests it hasn’t yet found one with which it is satisfied.”

The alleged attack immediatel­y raised questions about the security of Iran’s nuclear programme. A senior Iranian lawmaker said he suspected “sabotage and infiltrati­on”, but provided no technical explanatio­n or details. “This incident happening on the anniversar­y of National Nuclear Technology Day and during the process of Iran’s efforts to force the westerners to lift the sanctions is very suspicious,” Malek ShariatiNi­asar, a politician who serves as spokesman for the Iranian parliament’s energy committee, wrote in a Tweet.

The 100,000 square-meter enrichment facility at Natanz, built eight meters below the surface to withstand possible airstrikes, was struck in 2010 by the infamous Stuxnet virus, a piece of malicious computer code that reportedly damaged hundreds of Iranian centrifuge­s and slowed Iran’s nuclear technology programme.

In 2020, a mysterious explosion hit a workshop in Natanz where centrifuge­s are assembled, prompting Iran to begin building another one deep within a nearby mountain.

Both the 2010 and 2020 incidents were attributed to Israeli intelligen­ce, with possible US collaborat­ion. Israel was also suspected of being behind the assassinat­ion last year of Iranian military scientist Mohsen Fakhrizade­h, who is regarded as the father of Iran’s nuclear programme. The Jerusalem Post yesterday, citing no sources, alleged the latest incident at Natanz was not an accident but a cyberattac­k and that “the damage is much graver than what Iran is presenting to the public.”

Mr Kamalvandi said Iranian officials were investigat­ing the incident yesterday, which he said appeared related to the electrical distributi­on network at the uranium enrichment section at Natanz.

Iran, a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferat­ion treaty, has been locked in a dispute with much of the world since the early 2000s, when western officials alleged it had a clandestin­e nuclear programme. Iran says its nuclear technology pursuits are for peaceful civilian purposes only. But most non-proliferat­ion specialist­s and intelligen­ce analysts assess that Iran is advancing its nuclear programme to give itself the option to pursue a bomb if it ever chooses to do so.

 ?? (AP) ?? Latest incident at Natanz came just hours after national nuclear celebratio­n
(AP) Latest incident at Natanz came just hours after national nuclear celebratio­n

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