onedomino
SCE to AUX
- Sep 14, 2004
- 2,677
- 482
- 98
-U.N. Says Iran Rejected Inspection of Military Base
Tue Mar 1, 2005 01:15 PM ET
By Louis Charbonneau and Francois Murphy
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=7775720
VIENNA (Reuters) - Iran rejected a request by U.N. nuclear inspectors to return to its Parchin military base, where Washington suspects Iran might have conducted tests linked to nuclear bomb-making, the U.N. atomic watchdog said Tuesday.
Several months after their initial requests, Iran permitted U.N. inspectors to visit Parchin in January. During this visit, inspectors told Iranian officials they would like to visit an area not covered in that inspection, the agency said.
Deputy chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Pierre Goldschmidt, quoted Iran's response in a speech to the agency's board as saying: "The expectation of the (IAEA) in visiting specified ... points in Parchin Complex are fulfilled and thus there is no justification for an additional visit."
Iran says its nuclear intentions are limited to the peaceful generation of electricity, but Washington accuses it of using its nuclear program as a cover to build an atomic bomb.
Iran is not required to allow the IAEA into sites like Parchin, where there is no clear sign of nuclear activities.
But Western diplomats on the IAEA board said permitting agency inspections at such sites was crucial to building confidence that Tehran's nuclear plans are as peaceful as it insists.
Goldschmidt said Tehran had "facilitated in a timely manner agency access to nuclear materials and facilities" as required under its IAEA Safeguards Agreement and the Additional Protocol allowing more intrusive, short-notice inspections.
Iran's senior delegate to the IAEA meeting, Sirus Naseri, said the fact the agency had been allowed into a secure military complex like Parchin at all was itself significant.
"The mere fact that Iran has in the context of transparency provided such access is a matter that is significant and should be considered in that context," Naseri told reporters.
REPORT FAILURE
Goldschmidt also said a December visit to a uranium conversion plant at Isfahan had "revealed extensive underground excavation activities which Iran had failed to report in a timely manner to the agency as required."
This excavation was the digging of a tunnel under the Isfahan plant, which Iran has said could be used to store equipment for protection in case of U.S. or Israeli attack.
In September, the IAEA board of governors passed a resolution calling on Iran "as a further confidence-building measure, voluntarily to reconsider its decision to start construction of a research reactor modified by heavy water."
Heavy-water reactors can be used to produce significant amounts of bomb-grade plutonium, which can then be extracted from the spent fuel.
Goldschmidt said Iran was forging ahead with plans for the reactor. "Iranian officials have indicated that the heavy water research reactor project is progressing," he said.