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Special report:Iran Nuclear Crisis
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| "I officially announce that Iran has joined the nuclear club," President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was quoted by official media as telling a specially staged gathering in the eastern holy city of Mashhad. (Photo: Xinhua/AFP) | TEHRAN, April 11 (Xinhua) -- Iran on Tuesday declared
that it has gained ticket to join global nuclear club by having successfully
produced 3.5 percent enriched uranium, a technological leap in the process for
nuclear power plant construction.
"I officially announce that Iran has joined the
nuclear club," President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was quoted by official media as
telling a specially staged gathering in the eastern holy city of Mashhad.
Ranking Iranian officials, representatives of
civilians and mullahs, and 15 ambassadors mostly from neighboring states
attended the Mashhad gathering.
He elaborated that the Islamic Republic had obtained
access to nuclear fuel cycle and produced low-grade enriched uranium which can
be used to build nuclear power plant on Sunday. Enriched uranium is the key
material for civil nuclear fuel cycle construction, but it can be used for
building nuclear weapons at a degree of enrichment as high as 90 percent.
Accusing Iran of developing nuclear weapons covertly,
the United States, along with the European Union, has been pressing the Islamic
Republic to abandon the nuclear program, wielding UN sanctions.
"So far, Iran has completely mastered nuclear fuel
cycle," Ahmadinejad declared.
The hardline president vowed simultaneously that Iran
would forge ahead continuously on the path of nuclear development until the
country reached the capability of industrial-scale uranium enrichment.
However, Ahmadinejad showed some degree of calmness
by promising that future moves over the Iranian nuclear program would still be
governed by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
"Iran's nuclear activities have been under the
complete supervision of the IAEA. The country will continue its activities under
the agency's supervision and within the framework of the Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT) in order to achieve industrial-scale uranium enrichment," the
president said.
He stressed that Iran would be committed to its
promise that the nuclear technology must be used for peaceful purpose due to its
reliance on "the faith of its youth and the lofty values of the Iranian-Islamic
culture."
The president warned the western countries not to
"repeat their past mistake" by trying to prevent Iran from achieving its rights,
a clear reference to the report and the hand-over of the Iranian nuclear file to
the UN Security Council on Feb. 4 and March 8 respectively.
Soon after the nuclear case being reported to the UN,
the Islamic Republic resumed small-scale uranium enrichment and barred snap
inspections of the IAEA required by the additional protocol of the NPT.
At the gathering on Tuesday, Ahmadinejad's deputy and
chief of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization Gholamreza Aqazadeh further detailed
the president's announcement by saying that Iran has successfully "produced
enriching uranium to the 3.5 percent".
Experts have pointed out that the technological gap
between 3.5 percent and 90 percent is far less wide than that between a blank
file and 3.5 percent enriched uranium.
Aqazadeh said that the achievement means that Iran
has "passed the stage of pilot production" and has paved the way for launching
3,000 centrifuges by the end of the current Iranian calendar year(March 20,
2007).
The Iranian nuclear chief also revealed that Iran has
produced 110 tons of uranium hexafluoride gas (UF6), the feedstock for
enrichment, and the production of a heavy water reactor in Iran would be
completed in two years.
Earlier in the day, the Kuwaiti News Agency quoted
Iran's powerful former president and the incumbent Expediency Council Chairman
Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani as saying that Iran has launched 164 centrifuges at the
uranium enrichment facility in the central town of Natanz and "got the
industrial output".
"We prefer to develop the work in order to achieve a
complete industrial unit," Rafsanjani said.
Hours after Iran's claim of nuclear membership, the
United States soon warned that the Islamic Republic was "moving in the wrong
direction".
"Iran's announcement had heightened concerns in the
international community about the country's nuclear program," White House
spokesman Scott McClellan told reporters.
Iranian officials' unanimous announcement of the
sensitive technological achievement came just one day before a scheduled visit
by IAEA Director General Mohamed ElBaladei and about two weeks before a deadline
set by the UN Security Council for Iran to re-suspend all activities related to
the enrichment.
The UN Security Council made the call in a
non-binding presidential statement on March 29, granting Iran 30 days to comply,
but the requirement has been rejected by Tehran as illegal. Thus, ElBaladei's
visit had been viewed as a last-ditch effort to ease the escalating tension, but
apparently, the UN nuclear chief is believed to be facing a tough nut.
Rafsanjani admitted on Tuesday that the situation of
the Iranian nuclear issue had become "very complicated" and ElBaradei would
encounter a new situation once he enters Iran. Enditem |