The Independent

Iran pledges to upgrade damaged nuclear site and to avenge ‘Israeli attack’

- BORZOU DARAGAHI INTERNATIO­NAL CORRESPOND­ENT

Iran yesterday vowed to upgrade its nuclear programme as a result of a suspected Israeli attack on one of its most sensitive atomic technology facilities.

Iran’s foreign ministry spokespers­on said yesterday that Iran would replace first-generation IR-1 uranium enrichment centrifuge­s, damaged in the attack on Sunday at its facility near the city of Natanz, with more sophistica­ted devices that could produce nuclear fissile material more quickly and efficientl­y.

Such a move would be highly controvers­ial. An effort by Iran to accelerate its nuclear programme could

further imperil efforts to revive a 2015 nuclear deal which placed limits on Iran’s nuclear programme in exchange for the removal of sanctions.

Talks between Iranian, American, and other internatio­nal officials to restore the deal are to resume tomorrow. Iran’s foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, blamed Israel for the attack and said that Iran would pursue both removal of sanctions through diplomacy and nuclear advances in response.

“If they think our positions in the negotiatio­ns have weakened, actually this despicable attack will strengthen our stances,” said Mr Zarif, according to the official Islamic Republic News Agency. “The Natanz facility will now be able to enrich several times more [quickly], being full of advanced centrifuge­s.”

Iranian foreign ministry spokespers­on, Saeed Khatibzade­h, vowed that Iran would take revenge for the attack “at a proper time and place”.

“This incident, fortunatel­y, did not cause any damage to human lives or the environmen­t,” he told reporters. “However, it could have been a catastroph­e. This is a crime against humanity.”

Details about the attack remain sketchy. No one has claimed responsibi­lity, but it is widely being attributed to Israel by unnamed Israeli and American officials speaking to journalist­s who often serve as conduits for intelligen­ce service leaks. The Israeli broadcaste­r Kan cited unnamed intelligen­ce officials as saying Israel’s Mossad carried out a cyber-attack.

According to Iranian officials, a power outage or disruption cut off electricit­y to the Ahmadi Roshan Nuclear Facility where highly sensitive, high-speed whirring centrifuge­s filled with uranium gas draw out Uranium-235 isotopes, radioactiv­e fissile material that can be used as fuel for civilian nuclear reactors or bombs.

That power outage may have caused an explosion or explosions. The Iranian Nour news agency, which is close to the country’s security establishm­ent, said a perpetrato­r “who caused the shutdown of electricit­y” has been identified. And an unnamed source cited by Nour claimed that Iranian authoritie­s have ascertaine­d how the disruption took place and that measures have been taken to “restore the facility to full capacity”.

The attack comes just days before Iranian, American, British, French, German, Russian, and Chinese diplomats are to gather tomorrow in Vienna for talks on efforts to resurrect the 2015 nuclear deal, called the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action. But few officials addressed the matter.

“It is astonishin­g that extraterri­torial sabotage and acts of violence are becoming commonplac­e and even accepted by some government­s,” former Swedish foreign minister Jan Eliasson wrote in a Tweet. “The Iran talks are at a sensitive stage. There is no place now for provocatio­ns or the law of the jungle. May cool heads prevail on all sides.”

Along with a spate of attacks on other nuclear and military sites in Iran and the assassinat­ion in November of the country’s top military nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizade­h, Sunday’s incident underscore­s major security failures by authoritie­s in one of the most repressive police states in the world.

Though the blast did not cause any leaks of radiation or injuries, it also underscore­d safety worries about Iran’s nuclear pursuits. Iran has been prone to industrial accidents, more often caused by lax safeguards than foreign sabotage. Behrouz Kamalvandi, the spokespers­on for Iran’s Atomic Energy Organisati­on, was badly injured on Sunday after falling seven metres through a hole while inspecting the Natanz facility.

Some reports cited unnamed officials saying that the attack could set back Iran’s nuclear programme by nine months. But Iran has already amassed enough reactor-grade uranium to build at least one nuclear weapon were it to refine its stockpile to weapons-grade purity, break out of the Nuclear Non-Proliferat­ion Treaty to which it is a signatory, and begin assembling a weapon.

And though Iranian officials acknowledg­ed that some centrifuge­s had been damaged, how many remains

unclear. According to a February report by the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, Iran was operating 5,060 first-generation IR-1 centrifuge­s and 348 second-generation centrifuge­s in Natanz, while also testing out more advanced designs. It also keeps unused centrifuge­s in storage.

“The explosion itself was not strong enough to destroy everything,” said Mr Kamalvandi, speaking from his hospital bed in a video posted online. “One of the ceilings in one of the control rooms came down. Fortunatel­y, no one was hurt. The situation is such that they can, God willing, repair the areas that were damaged.”

At its peak in 2013, before talks began that ultimately put limits on Iran’s nuclear programme, Iran was operating some 25,000 centrifuge­s.

Non-proliferat­ion experts say Iran’s nuclear programme is relatively unsophisti­cated but effective, using technologi­cal designs from the dawn of the nuclear age.

 ?? (Satellite image, 2021 Maxar Tech) ?? Iran’s Natanz nuclear facility, south of the capital Tehran
(Satellite image, 2021 Maxar Tech) Iran’s Natanz nuclear facility, south of the capital Tehran

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