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Nearly all of Iran's advanced nuke centrifuges failing, top expert reveals

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Nearly all of Iran's advanced nuke centrifuges failing, top expert reveals

Nearly all of Iran’s advanced centrifuges used for enriching uranium potentially towards a nuclear bomb are failing, one of the world’s leading nuclear weapons experts revealed to this week.

Many have been worried that if Iran succeeds in developing advanced centrifuges, the machines which spin rapidly to enrich uranium, it could “sneak out” a nuclear weapon in a matter of weeks without being detected.

The expert, David Albright, is a former International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Action-Team inspector, head of the Institute for Science and International Security think tank on nuclear weapons and is close to CIA, Mossad and IAEA officials.



His update on the issue closes off one of the many concerns about the nuclear deal – which is ironic since he is generally viewed as a hawk on Iran.

But it is significant, Albright explained to the , in order to invest resources in tracking the other very real threats to watch out for regarding Iranian centrifuges and Tehran’s potential for developing nuclear weapons.

There have been a range of debates about Iran’s nuclear program and the loopholes in the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action – known as the Iran nuclear deal, which the US withdrew from last May – which could allow the Islamic republic to continue advancing towards a bomb without violating the agreement.

One of the hottest issues has been that the deal allows Iran to continue experiments on advanced centrifuges.

In a nutshell, advanced centrifuges like the IR-8 are potentially 16 times more powerful to enrich uranium compared to the simple IR-1 centrifuges that Tehran possessed prior to the 2015 deal.

“The IR-8 has been a failure,” Albright said. “The centrifuge uses carbon fiber bellows, which involve carbon fiber tubes connected by a movable part, the bellows. They go into the shape of a banana when they hit a certain speed. You need to make them bendable. The bellow must be flexible, but they are made of carbon fiber so there are lots of problems with them cracking,” he said.

If the IR-8s worked properly, they could spin at a much faster rate and enrich uranium more rapidly.

Even with Iran’s less advanced IR-1s, inspectors have found that 20%-30% of them regularly fail. This may be why it took so long for Tehran to get suspicious about its centrifuges failing upon being infected with the Stuxnet computer virus in 2009-2010.

Despite this failure, Albright said that Iran works hard to make a public showing that it is succeeding.

In September, Iranian nuclear chief Ali Akbar Salehi made waves worldwide, when he announced that a new facility to produce advanced centrifuges at the Natanz nuclear plant had been completed.

To the untrained eye, the centrifuges in the background of a photo of Salehi seemed to bolster the seriousness of his claims. But to the trained eye, Albright said that the show was totally superficial, and if anything, exposed Iranian failures.

He said that the centrifuges were easily identifiable as IR-6’s – due to their single rotor tube and the absence of a bellow – all of which have failed to date.

Yet, after describing all of these failures, Albright is as concerned as ever about Tehran plotting to obtain a nuclear bomb and emphasizes the need for Israel and the West to stand watch.

He said that Iran has had success with the IR-2m centrifuge, which is three to four times more powerful than the IR-1 model, and that the Islamic republic regularly discusses its future aspirations to build tens of thousands of centrifuges.

Since Iran “can never do that at a cheaper price than what they can buy” from Russia for civilian nuclear uses, its desire for a larger volume of centrifuges “makes no sense at all” for anything other than a nuclear weapons program.

Albright noted that inspectors found slots for 3,000 IR-2m centrifuges in one of Iran’s facilities. However, he warned that the inspectors never clarified whether Tehran had built and concealed such a large quantity of higher-quality centrifuges, or whether its scientists only got to the point of making the slots, but not producing the machines themselves.

All of these pieces of evidence form “a strong argument against [the truth of] Iran saying it has a civilian nuclear program,” he added.

The nuclear weapons expert said that these pieces of evidence led the US, France, England and Germany to agree in early 2018 that if “Iran scaled up its enrichment program, that would be viewed as a military program,” and a way to say that Iran had violated the agreement – and sanctions, therefore, needed to be re-imposed.

Albright said that Tehran’s behavior surrounding advanced centrifuges, even with their failures, has left even the Europeans “feeling that they want to make nuclear weapons.” He hopes that this will eventually lead the EU to take a tougher stance on Iran.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/m.jpos...rifuges-failing-top-expert-reveals-579215/amp
—————


It appears the only thing Salehi is good as is lying to the Iranian people. Another western puppet like Zarif.
 
Yet another benefit to the JCPOA!

Let's thank the traitors again.
 
It appears the only thing Salehi is good as is lying to the Iranian people. Another western puppet like Zarif.

This is sensationalist article that not reporting anything radically new and written for readers who are poorly versed in this topic. And there is nothing that contradicts the official statements of Iranian officials.

Now turn to the real facts. Salehi in last year spoke directly that all tests have passed the IR-2M and IR-4 centrifuges, that ready for mass production and deploying now. In this article above also states that the IR-2M is successful and and strangely forgotten about IR-4.
On IR-6 and IR-8 centrifuges Salehi more than once acknowledged that there they have the problems and that need time to solve them.

""The IR-2M and the IR-4 have passed the research and development period and we can mass produce them, but due to the (nuclear deal), we don't do it yet," Salehi said. He said the IR-6 had some faults but could be mass produced after solving them."
https://www.foxnews.com/world/with-nuclear-deal-under-threat-iran-shows-off-centrifuges

"In the last three years, although we have injected gas into the IR-8 centrifuge, we see problems in that on a daily basis, and there have to be many experiments carried out and all of them have to be successful in order to reach the mass production,” he said. We need time for more experiments on the IR-8, but we already have the capability for its mass production, Salehi added."
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13971103000480
 
I wonder how much Albright Data are updated ,after all he is retired
 
Nearly all of Iran's advanced nuke centrifuges failing, top expert reveals

Nearly all of Iran’s advanced centrifuges used for enriching uranium potentially towards a nuclear bomb are failing, one of the world’s leading nuclear weapons experts revealed to this week.

Many have been worried that if Iran succeeds in developing advanced centrifuges, the machines which spin rapidly to enrich uranium, it could “sneak out” a nuclear weapon in a matter of weeks without being detected.

The expert, David Albright, is a former International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Action-Team inspector, head of the Institute for Science and International Security think tank on nuclear weapons and is close to CIA, Mossad and IAEA officials.



His update on the issue closes off one of the many concerns about the nuclear deal – which is ironic since he is generally viewed as a hawk on Iran.

But it is significant, Albright explained to the , in order to invest resources in tracking the other very real threats to watch out for regarding Iranian centrifuges and Tehran’s potential for developing nuclear weapons.

There have been a range of debates about Iran’s nuclear program and the loopholes in the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action – known as the Iran nuclear deal, which the US withdrew from last May – which could allow the Islamic republic to continue advancing towards a bomb without violating the agreement.

One of the hottest issues has been that the deal allows Iran to continue experiments on advanced centrifuges.

In a nutshell, advanced centrifuges like the IR-8 are potentially 16 times more powerful to enrich uranium compared to the simple IR-1 centrifuges that Tehran possessed prior to the 2015 deal.

“The IR-8 has been a failure,” Albright said. “The centrifuge uses carbon fiber bellows, which involve carbon fiber tubes connected by a movable part, the bellows. They go into the shape of a banana when they hit a certain speed. You need to make them bendable. The bellow must be flexible, but they are made of carbon fiber so there are lots of problems with them cracking,” he said.

If the IR-8s worked properly, they could spin at a much faster rate and enrich uranium more rapidly.

Even with Iran’s less advanced IR-1s, inspectors have found that 20%-30% of them regularly fail. This may be why it took so long for Tehran to get suspicious about its centrifuges failing upon being infected with the Stuxnet computer virus in 2009-2010.

Despite this failure, Albright said that Iran works hard to make a public showing that it is succeeding.

In September, Iranian nuclear chief Ali Akbar Salehi made waves worldwide, when he announced that a new facility to produce advanced centrifuges at the Natanz nuclear plant had been completed.

To the untrained eye, the centrifuges in the background of a photo of Salehi seemed to bolster the seriousness of his claims. But to the trained eye, Albright said that the show was totally superficial, and if anything, exposed Iranian failures.

He said that the centrifuges were easily identifiable as IR-6’s – due to their single rotor tube and the absence of a bellow – all of which have failed to date.

Yet, after describing all of these failures, Albright is as concerned as ever about Tehran plotting to obtain a nuclear bomb and emphasizes the need for Israel and the West to stand watch.

He said that Iran has had success with the IR-2m centrifuge, which is three to four times more powerful than the IR-1 model, and that the Islamic republic regularly discusses its future aspirations to build tens of thousands of centrifuges.

Since Iran “can never do that at a cheaper price than what they can buy” from Russia for civilian nuclear uses, its desire for a larger volume of centrifuges “makes no sense at all” for anything other than a nuclear weapons program.

Albright noted that inspectors found slots for 3,000 IR-2m centrifuges in one of Iran’s facilities. However, he warned that the inspectors never clarified whether Tehran had built and concealed such a large quantity of higher-quality centrifuges, or whether its scientists only got to the point of making the slots, but not producing the machines themselves.

All of these pieces of evidence form “a strong argument against [the truth of] Iran saying it has a civilian nuclear program,” he added.

The nuclear weapons expert said that these pieces of evidence led the US, France, England and Germany to agree in early 2018 that if “Iran scaled up its enrichment program, that would be viewed as a military program,” and a way to say that Iran had violated the agreement – and sanctions, therefore, needed to be re-imposed.

Albright said that Tehran’s behavior surrounding advanced centrifuges, even with their failures, has left even the Europeans “feeling that they want to make nuclear weapons.” He hopes that this will eventually lead the EU to take a tougher stance on Iran.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/m.jpos...rifuges-failing-top-expert-reveals-579215/amp
—————


It appears the only thing Salehi is good as is lying to the Iranian people. Another western puppet like Zarif.
LOLOLOL!!!!!:haha::haha::haha::haha::haha::haha::haha::haha::haha::haha::haha::sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic:
I can remember these very same western "experts" making these very same claims about irans nuclear technology back around 2010 or earlier,only then it included things like irans 3.5% enriched uranium being so completely contaminated with impurities like molybdenum,that iran could never even hope to enrich to 20%,let alone produce the fuel assemblies for the TRR.o_O:haha:
But this is what really gets me,if according to the western "experts" irans nuclear program and its associated technologies are of such utterly abysmal quality and still not even properly mastered after nearly 20 years of constant effort and vast sums of money,then why oh why has the west inflicted such huge economic and political costs to itself and so many others over something that clearly is no threat to it at all and a huge waste of effort for iran??:disagree::haha:
Of course can you really trust any so called "experts" who go by the name of the GoodIsis?o_O[LOLOLOL!!!]:haha:
Not to mention that Albrights own rep among his fellow western "expert" peers isnt exactly the greatest.:suicide2:
My rule of thumb when it comes to western "experts" and the [usually] right wing think tanks that many of them work for,is to always take their claims and guesstimations with a rather large heaping of sodium chloride ie not a teaspoon,nor a tablespoon,not even a dessert spoons worth of the stuff,but an entire salt mines worth of it.......you know just to be on the safe side.:azn:
 
LOL... Zio scum say funny things.

I read this cocksuker Albright say the sames thing o Iran for 30 years. Every year he has been wrong.
 
Salehi is very honest, he said that Europeans (their best of the best engineers) need 8 years from a centrifuge prototype to a mature (economic) serial production of a machine that continuously runs for 10-20 or more years.

If your IR-8 has 3 years lifetime, it won't be economic to produce: Your best engineers need to perfect the machine an it production so much that it has a minimal failure rate for its complete lifetime.

I like ex nuclear chief Abbasi and for the general public, people creating feelings for the nuclear program via anti-barjam agendas (like Hassan Abbasi or Raefipour) is good too.
But the truth is that Khamenei and Zarif as well as Salehi are all on the same line: Barjam is a ideal nuclear deal for Iran as the time it suspends enrichment is necessary to create a centrifuge of the technical level europeans were able to do in the 90's with their best engineers, multi-national efforts and financial efforts for the centrifuge lifetime program costing tens of billions of dollars (they had around centrifuge 5 generations).

Salehi is honest and Iran needs some years to master a close to state of the art centrifuge: A centrifuge of which a single cascade of e.g. 200 machines in a tunnel can enrich enough uranium for several bombs in just a month or so (today 10.000 IR-1s are needed for that).

The path is clear and if there is disrespect for Zarif (e.g. for his alleged statement that the US can destroy very fast), at least spare it for Salehi.
 
As Salehi "head of AEOI" recently said:
"We've been working on IR8 for 3 years & despite this we see new problems in it everyday which we're trying to solve.
Or
IR1 rate failure was 30% now it's reached to 2% & we trying to get it down to 1%.
Therefore I don't see "Iran works hard to make a public showing that it is succeeding"..
Or how a centrifuge "IR-8" which still in testing phase and needed 7 years to be mass-produced has been a failure?

David Albright:
435064.jpg

Take the ubiquitous David Albright, a former U.N. inspector in Iraq. Over the years, Albright had been cited in hundreds of news articles and made scores of television appearances as an authority on Iraqi weapons. A sample prewar quote from Albright (CNN, 10/5/02): “In terms of the chemical and biological weapons, Iraq has those now. How many, how could they deliver them? I mean, these are the big questions.”

But when the postwar weapons hunt started turning up empty, Albright made a rather candid admission (L.A. Times, 4/20/03):

If there are no weapons of mass destruction, I’ll be mad as hell. I certainly accepted the administration claims on chemical and biological weapons. I figured they were telling the truth. If there is no [unconventional weapons program], I will feel taken, because they asserted these things with such assurance.​
 
The Rouhani prostitutes destroyed everything in Iran in the worst way in the past 300 years.

Qajars are angles when it comes to Rouhani team/gang.
 
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