The International Atomic Energy Agency has found that "there is no evidence
that the previous undeclared nuclear material and activities ... were related
to a nuclear weapons program." Not yet, anyway. Director General Mohamed
ElBaradei's report adds that Iran's past "pattern of concealment"
means "it will take some time before the agency is able to conclude that
Iran's nuclear program is exclusively for peaceful purposes."
ElBaradei's report will help determine the decisions of the IAEA Board of Governors
at their November 20 meeting. If the Board finds that Iran has failed to conclusively
prove it has no nuclear arms program, Tehran could face sanctions from the UN
Security Council. However, Iran's decision to suspend its uranium enrichment
activities, sign the Additional Protocol, and provide the IAEA a dossier with
extensive details of its past nuclear activities, have all helped diffuse the
crisis. This combined with ElBaradei's "no evidence" finding seems
to make it unlikely that the Board will declare Iran in non-compliance with
its nuclear obligations.
Yet, according to the IAEA report, "Iran has admitted that it produced
small amounts of low enriched uranium...and that it had failed to report a large
number of conversion, fabrication and irradiation activities involving nuclear
material, including the separation of a small amount of plutonium." This
is a clear violation of Iran's nuclear reporting obligations, reinforcing suspicions
that Iran is pursuing an illegal nuclear weapons program.
In this regard, the suspension of uranium enrichment activities is an especially
important first step. Iran has informed the IAEA that its "temporary"
suspension of uranium enrichment began on November 10. During a November 10
visit to Moscow, Supreme National Security Council Secretary Hassan Rowhani
reiterated Iran's official position that the country " by no means seeks
to acquire a nuclear capability. Nuclear arms play no role in our defense doctrine"
and said Iran's decision to sign the Additional Protocol was "in order
to enhance our credibility." The protocol will have to be ratified by Iran's
parliament, but Iran has declared its intention to "continue to cooperate
with the IAEA in accordance with the protocol, pending its ratification."
This will assuage some, but by no means all, concerns regarding the direction
of Iran's nuclear activities. The Additional Protocol and its intrusive, snap
inspections will make it difficult for Iran to pursue a clandestine nuclear
weapons program, but it does not prevent Iran from pursuing fuel-cycle capabilities
that would give the country a "break-out" nuclear weapon option.
The international community's suspicions have focused particularly on Iran's
sophisticated uranium enrichment facilities. IAEA environmental samples taken
at Natanz and at Kalaye have pointed to uranium enrichment activities at both
sites. Iran has claimed that some imported centrifuge parts at Natanz were contaminated.
The IAEA is still waiting for Iran to provide full details on the origin of
the imported equipment. Thus far, Iran has given the agency drawings of the
components used to make centrifuges but claims it does not know where the equipment
originated from because it was purchased through third parties.
The IAEA's investigative process is ongoing and will not be finished before
November 20. In order to verify the details in the dossier and determine conclusively
that Iran's program is exclusively for civilian purposes, inspectors are currently
using satellite imagery, visiting relevant sites in Iran, interviewing key personnel
and taking environmental samples. ElBaradei has said that it will take a few
more months "particularly with regard to very complex investigations"
to clarify the origin of the highly enriched uranium traces.
Tehran's steps in the right direction have, for now at least, maneuvered Iran
out of a dangerous corner. That process began on October 21, when the foreign
ministers of the United Kingdom, France and Germany secured a commitment from
Tehran to suspend uranium-enrichment, sign the Additional Protocol and cooperate
fully with the IAEA. The deal was probably secured because Tehran recognized
that it was heading towards a collision course with the international community
(and not just the United States), one that would have left it sanctioned and
ostracized. The three European foreign ministers are believed to have impressed
Iran with the urgency of the situation and with the possibility of future civilian
nuclear cooperation.
Significantly, the nuclear deal has the blessing of hard-line clerics, who
view it both as a means to maintain Iran's nuclear technology, and to undercut
the United States and Israel's policy towards Iran. On November 2, in a meeting
with Iranian officials, supreme religious leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said
that "Iran made a correct and wise decision and it does not mean surrender.
It neutralized the American and Zionist plot," adding that it "is
a peaceful way for us to keep our nuclear technology." The prospect of
future nuclear cooperation appears to be key. Hard-line cleric Ayatollah Ahmad
Jannati told worshippers Iran would not respect the commitments it made unless
Britain, France and Germany kept promises to offer greater cooperation on nuclear
energy and nonmilitary technology.
The crisis is clearly far from over, but an opportunity has risen for the international
community to convince Tehran to maintain this course.
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