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Iran's Progress In Nuclear And Missile Programs

Obama must offer a ‘grand deal’ to Iran on nuclear programme

For Iran, the nuclear crisis has become the most important national security and foreign policy challenge since the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s.
The country may not be losing hundreds of thousands of soldiers and civilians to a hot war. But it is enduring the most severe sanctions in its history, foreign assassinations of its scientists, and international pressure that has shaken the foundation of its relations regionally and with Western and Eastern powers. It would not be unrealistic to conclude that Iran has already paid the price for a nuclear bomb.
And yet Iran has not relinquished its uranium enrichment rights under the Non Proliferation Treaty, and instead has become more resolute and defiant. Today it has about 10,000 nuclear centrifuges and has mastered uranium enrichment to the 20-per cent grade level - defying the UN Security Council and the West by bringing its enrichment capacity to a “point of no return.”
With both sides scoring such high points, this duel could be interpreted as a win-win game, with the West squeezing Iran as never before and Iran’s nuclear programme continuing on. I would suggest, however, it is really a lose-lose one, with a trajectory headed toward a violent endgame. This, though, can be avoided with a grand deal.
It’s encouraging that Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad recently stated that the now politicised dispute over Iran’s nuclear programme should be resolved by direct talks between Iran and the United States. This is a major shift in the Iranian president’s understanding.
When I visited Mr Ahmadinejad in 2005 as a possible candidate to work for the foreign ministry, we discussed Iran-US relations and the role of the US on the nuclear file. At that time, he disagreed with my recommendation to bolster dialogue with the West - including the US - to resolve the nuclear dilemma. He saw enrichment as a technical, legal issue, a legitimate right for Iran under the Non Proliferation Treaty. I cautioned that for the West, it is neither a legal nor technical issue, but a political one, which requires direct talks with the US to be resolved. Whether his recent comments are a matter of consensus within Iran, however, remains a big question.
Another question is whether President Obama will be able to orchestrate a “real engagement” with Iran - in contrast to his first term where he applied devastating unilateral and international sanctions, pressure, covert operations and an intelligence war. Those measures only contributed to further tensions and a thickening of the wall of mistrust between the two nations - wiping any chance of rapprochement off the political map.
The Obama administration needs a new engagement policy with Iran that brings an end to 33 years of a failed “diplomacy plus pressure” policy dubbed as “dual-track.” The Iranian leadership values actions over words - particularly since Mr Obama’s pleasantries have coincided with the most draconian sanctions and measures applied on Iran.
In the second term, it is time for the Obama administration to offer Iran a “grand deal,” where dual-track diplomacy is supported by constructive actions to prove his sincerity. Such a strategy needs to be drafted and implemented wisely, in both substance and style, to prevent previous failures and bring a real change to US-Iran relations. It also requires Iran to accommodate such policy by taking appropriate steps to facilitate the trend.
I cannot agree more with Obama when days after his reelection he said: “There should be a way in which they [Iran] can enjoy peaceful nuclear power while still meeting their international obligations and providing clear assurances to the international community that they’re not pursuing a nuclear weapon.” The following is a roadmap to realise that goal:
The negotiating countries known as P5+1 and Iran have two immediate ways to cool down tensions and warmongering: 1) Iran can agree to halt 20-per cent enrichment and cap it at 5 per cent in return for partial removal of sanctions - such as European unilateral sanctions on Iranian oil and Iran’s central bank; or 2) the P5+1 can get more inspections, taking advantage of Iranian legislation passed by the parliament that permits the government to implement “Additional Protocol” inspections and safeguards in return for the West recognizing Iran’s legitimate right to enrichment.
If Iran and the P5+1 agreed to this second option that would greatly ease the resolution of outstanding technical issues between the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and Iran.
A next step should be a realistic, comprehensive package for solving the nuclear standoff.
Such a package should ensure Iran’s maximum level of transparency and cooperation with the IAEA and guarantee “no breakout” in Iran’s nuclear programme. The P5+1 should reciprocate by recognising Iran’s right to enrichment under the Non-Proliferation Treaty and gradually lift sanctions.
Simultaneously, direct talks between Iran and the US on broader issues are essential. Rapprochement will be possible only if, for the duration of engagement policy, the US dual-track policy ceases and hostile actions, sanctions, and other forms of coercive pressures are put on hold. And Tehran and Washington must also agree on a comprehensive agenda for reconciliation. That agenda must include all bilateral, regional, and international issues - demonstrating the “entire game plan” while implementing it in phases.
For instance, Iran and the US could first cooperate on Afghanistan to build trust, then move on to the Syria crisis by organising a free election supervised by the international community.
Helpful, too, would be for both sides to dial back the language of threats and heated rhetoric and to convince political factions in both countries to support the talks - at least temporarily - while negotiations continue. Tehran and Washington will need to recognise their respective spoilers at home and abroad, and be determined to prevent them from obstructing and derailing rapprochement efforts.
The alternative to engagement will be catastrophic to international peace and security. The continuation of the economic and covert war against Iran would further radicalise its behaviour and shrink the manoeuvrability of Iranian decisionmakers to compromise. Ultimately the US would be forced to enter a third war in the Middle East - one that would be disastrous for the US, Iran, the region, and beyond. Therefore diplomatic progress is a must, not a choice.
Ambassador Seyed Hossein Mousavian is a research scholar at Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School and a former spokesman for Iran’s nuclear negotiators. His latest book is “The Iranian Nuclear Crisis: A Memoir” published by Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Obama must offer a
 
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US steps up spying on Iran’s reactor

WASHINGTON: US intelligence agencies have significantly stepped up spying operations on Iran’s Bushehr nuclear reactor prompted by concerns about the security of weapons-grade plutonium there, The Wall Street Journal reported Monday.

Citing unnamed US officials, the newspaper said the increased US surveillance of Bushehr has been conducted in part by US unmanned drones operating over the Gulf.

The effort resulted in the interception of visual images and audio communications coming from the reactor complex, the report said.

Iran says its nuclear programme is peaceful but many in the international community suspect its real aim is to develop nuclear weapons.

The UN Security Council has imposed four rounds of sanctions on Iran which have been augmented this year by painful Western restrictions on its vital oil exports, leading to serious economic problems.

Tehran suggested that a US drone was spying on Bushehr on November 1 when it sent Iranian fighter jets to pursue the unmanned craft, firing at it but missing, the US paper said.

But according to US officials, the drone was conducting surveillance that day, but not on Bushehr, The Journal said.

The stepped up surveillance came after the US government became alarmed over activities at Bushehr, especially the removal of fuel rods from the plant in October, just two months after it became fully operational, the paper said.

Tehran formally protested the Pentagon’s spying activities in a November 19 letter to United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, The Journal said.

The complaint charged that the United States has repeatedly violated Iranian airspace with its drone flights, according to the paper.

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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Iran says it has begun upgrading uranium centrifuges

DUBAI: Iran said on Wednesday it had started installing a new generation of machines for enriching uranium, an announcement likely to annoy the West and complicate efforts to resolve a decade-old dispute over its nuclear programme.

It came on the day the UN nuclear watchdog began talks in Tehran to try to advance a long-stalled investigation into suspected military dimensions of the programme. Iran had already told the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) that it planned to introduce new IR2-m centrifuges to its main enrichment plant near the central town of Natanz - a step that could significantly speed up its accumulation of material that the West fears could be used to develop a nuclear weapon. “From last month the installation of the new generation of these machines started,” Fereydoun Abbasi-Davani, head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organisation, was quoted as saying by the Iranian Students’ News Agency (ISNA). “We have produced the machines as planned and we are carrying out the installation gradually ... to complete the tests.”

Enriched uranium can fuel nuclear power plants, Iran’s stated aim, or, if refined to a high degree, provide material for bombs, which the West suspects is Tehran’s real purpose, something Iran strenuously denies. If deployed successfully, new-generation centrifuges could refine uranium several times faster than the model Iran now has.

It was not clear how many of the new centrifuges Iran aimed to install at Natanz, which is designed for tens of thousands; an IAEA note to members implied it could be up to 3,000 or so.

Abbasi-Davani said the new machines were specifically for lower-grade enrichment of uranium to below 5 percent purity. Iran has been enriching some uranium up to a concentration of 20 percent fissile material, only a short step from weapons grade, and it is this stockpile that has prompted Israel and the United States to warn that they will do whatever is necessary to prevent Iran being able to build a bomb. The major world powers have imposed sanctions to try to press Tehran to give up nuclear activities with a possible military dimension, while Iran wants them to recognise what it sees as its right to refine uranium for peaceful purposes. reuters

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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US steps up spying on Iran’s reactor

WASHINGTON: US intelligence agencies have significantly stepped up spying operations on Iran’s Bushehr nuclear reactor prompted by concerns about the security of weapons-grade plutonium there, The Wall Street Journal reported Monday.

Honnestly these guys have no clue about these matters at all . When was the last time that somebody used a light water reactor that has no hot cell or fuel recycling facility to produce pulotonium ?
 
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