Oroville Mercury-Register

Iran starts enriching uranium to 60%, its highest level ever

- By Jon Gambrell

>> Iran began enriching uranium Friday to its highest- ever purity that edges Tehran close to weapons-grade levels, attempting to pressure negotiator­s in Vienna amid talks on restoring its nuclear deal with world powers.

A top official said only a few grams an hour of uranium gas would be enriched up to 60% purity — triple the level it once did but at a quantity far lower than what the Islamic Republic could produce. Iran also is enriching at an above-ground facility at its Natanz nuclear site already visited by internatio­nal inspectors, not deep within its undergroun­d halls hardened to withstand airstrikes.

The narrow scope of the new enrichment provides Iran with a way to quickly de- escalate if it choses, experts say, but time is narrowing. An Iranian presidenti­al election looms on the horizon as Tehran already is threatenin­g to limit internatio­nal inspection­s. Israel, suspected over carrying out Sunday’s sabotage at Natanz, also could act again amid a long-running shadow war between the two Middle East rivals.

Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf, Iran’s parliament speaker, announced the higher enrichment on Twitter.

“The young and Godbelievi­ng Iranian scientists managed to achieve a 60% enriched uranium product,” Qalibaf said. “I congratula­te the brave nation of Islamic Iran on this success. The Iranian nation’s willpower is miraculous and can defuse any conspiracy.”

The head of the Atomic Energy Organizati­on of Iran, the country’s civilian nuclear arm, later acknowledg­ed the move to 60%. Ali Akbar Salehi told Iranian state television the centrifuge­s now produce 9 grams an hour, but that would drop to 5 grams an hour in the coming days.

“Any enrichment level that we desire is in our reach at the moment and we can do it at any time we want,” Salehi said.

It wasn’t clear why the first announceme­nt came from Qalibaf, a hard-line former leader in the paramilita­ry Revolution­ary Guard already named as a potential presidenti­al candidate in Iran’s upcoming June election.

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