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Published: November 16, 2007
WASHINGTON - The Bush administration plans to push for new sanctions against Iran after the United Nation's nuclear watchdog agency reported Thursday Tehran is providing "diminishing" information about its controversial nuclear program, U.S. officials said.
In a critically timed assessment, the International Atomic Energy Agency said that Iran provided "timely" and helpful new information on a secret program that became public in 2002, but that it did not fully answer questions or allow full access to Iranian personnel.
Iran is even less cooperative on its current program, the IAEA reported.
"Since early 2006, the agency has not received the type of information that Iran had previously been providing," the IAEA concluded. "The agency's knowledge about Iran's current nuclear program is diminishing."
The IAEA's report also confirmed that Iran has 3,000 centrifuges in operation, which is the minimum needed to enrich a significant amount of uranium and represents a tenfold increase over last year.
Having 3,000 functioning centrifuges is a major technical milestone for Iran. Uranium enrichment can be used to develop peaceful nuclear energy as well as nuclear weapons.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has stated repeatedly in recent months that Tehran has reached that strategic threshold. If all 3,000 centrifuges are working efficiently, Iran could produce a weapon in a year. But the report indicated that the IAEA has no evidence Iran could produce bomb-grade fuel. Most experts think it still faces significant technical problems.
"They have centrifuges, but it's unclear how well they work and how long they would work," said George Perkovich of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
At his confirmation hearings to be director of national intelligence in February, Mike McConnell estimated that Iran would not have a nuclear weapon until 2015.
Iran's new chief negotiator, Saeed Jalili, heralded the IAEA report for proving that "most ambiguities" about Tehran's program have been removed. At a news conference, he said the U.N. agency showed allegations of Iran trying to subvert a peaceful energy program to develop the world's deadliest weapon are "baseless."
Ahmadinejad said the report by IAEA chief Mohammed ElBaradei shows the world that Iran has been "right and the resistance of our nation has been correct."
U.S. arms experts took a middle ground.
"ElBaradei wants to focus on the positive in terms of the accounting for the past," Perkovich said. "But in the big strategic picture, the report is wholly negative because Iran is not suspending uranium enrichment. Iran is not only not suspending, but it is spitting in our face by saying they're going to ramp up with the next generation of centrifuges beyond what they had already."
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