April 12, 2007
The head of the U.N. atomic watchdog said on Thursday that Iran was still at the starting stage of creating a uranium enrichment plant and that concerns stemmed more from its motivations than the scale of production. "There are various definitions of industrial scale production. Iran is still at the starting stage of creating a uranium enrichment plant," Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, told reporters in Riyadh. "The fears do not only stem from Iran conducting industrial production but rather Iran's aims behind (enriching uranium) before it has nuclear reactors for electric power generation that need enriched uranium." ElBaradei was speaking after talks with Abdul-Rahman al-Attiyah, secretary-general of the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council. During his brief visit to Riyadh, ElBaradei also held talks with Saudi King Abdullah.
A year ago, the IAEA confirmed that Iran had managed to enrich uranium for the first time in small quantities after a similarly high-profile assertion by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Iran could make enough material for an atomic bomb in a year with 3,000 centrifuges, if it wanted, but that would require the machines to be running without hitches, Western experts say. ElBaradei said it would take years for Iran to develop nuclear weapons. Tehran says its nuclear program is peaceful. "The risk from Iran is not of tomorrow or after tomorrow, we have to understand this. Even those who believe Iran's goal is to produce nuclear weapons, believe this will not happen for years," ElBaradei said. "The risk is linked to the future possibilities in Iran's intentions, and this will require a global solution for regional security."
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