Iran Nuclear NewsKhan gave Iran machines useable for A-bomb - Pakistan

Khan gave Iran machines useable for A-bomb – Pakistan

-

Reuters: Pakistan acknowledged on Thursday for the first time that a disgraced Pakistani scientist at the centre of a nuclear black market gave Iran centrifuges which can be used to make atomic weapons.
Centrifuges purify uranium for use as fuel in atomic power plants
or bombs. Washington believes Iran’s centrifuge programme, which it concealed from U.N. inspectors for nearly two decades, is at the heart of clandestine atom bomb plans.
Reuters

By Zeeshan Haider

ISLAMABAD – Pakistan acknowledged on Thursday for the first time that a disgraced Pakistani scientist at the centre of a nuclear black market gave Iran centrifuges which can be used to make atomic weapons.

Centrifuges purify uranium for use as fuel in atomic power plants or bombs. Washington believes Iran’s centrifuge programme, which it concealed from U.N. inspectors for nearly two decades, is at the heart of clandestine atom bomb plans.

Tehran says its enrichment programme will produce only low-grade enriched fuel for power plants, not highly enriched uranium for weapons.

“(Abdul Qadeer Khan) has given centrifuges to Iran, but the government was in no way involved in this,” Pakistani Information Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed told Reuters.

Pakistan has admitted in the past that Khan, dubbed the father of Pakistan’s atomic bomb, smuggled nuclear secrets to North Korea, Iran and Libya. But this is the first time Islamabad admitted that Khan supplied Iran with centrifuges.

The U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) was not surprised by Pakistan’s public confirmation of Khan’s role in Iran’s programme. “We’re well aware that Iran received designs and centrifuge components from the Khan network,” IAEA spokeswoman Melissa Fleming said.

The agency has found no clear proof of an Iranian nuclear arms programme, but is not convinced Iran declared everything.

One Western diplomat in Vienna, where the IAEA is based, said Khan clearly knows the answer to the question of whether or not Iran wanted the bomb when it first made contact with Khan’s clandestine nuclear network in 1987.

“Khan is the man who would know if the Iranians wanted nuclear weapons,” the diplomat said on condition of anonymity, adding that it was a pity Islamabad refuses to allow the IAEA to question Khan directly.

Several Vienna diplomats said there is no way Islamabad was entirely unaware of Khan’s atomic peddling.

In November 2004, the Iranian exile group that first outed Tehran’s nuclear programme, the National Council of Resistance of Iran, said that between 1994 and 1996 Khan gave Iran the same Chinese design for a nuclear warhead that he had given Libya.

KHAN’S NUCLEAR “SUPERMARKET”

IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei has called Khan’s massive black market, with tentacles in Europe, Africa, the Middle East and Asia, a virtual “supermarket” for states seeking the bomb.

A.Q. Khan, revered in Pakistan as the man who secured for Pakistan the nuclear arms capability to balance that of nuclear armed neighbour and rival India, admitted last year to selling nuclear technology and made a televised apology to the nation.

The scandal was a severe embarrassment for Pakistan, the only Muslim state known to have nuclear weapons, and raised fears that weapons of mass destruction could fall into the hands of militants or rogue states.

Khan remains under close guard at his home in Islamabad, although authorities deny he is under house arrest, though they refuse to allow him to be questioned by the IAEA.

“We will not hand over Dr. Qadeer to any other country,” Ahmed reiterated on Thursday.

However, IAEA’s Fleming said that it was getting “good cooperation from Pakistan” in its probe of the extent of nuclear technology Iran received from Khan and his associates.

As French, British and German officials began a new round of talks with Iranian negotiators in Geneva on Tuesday, Tehran threatened to break off negotiations if they continued to insist that Iran abandon all sensitive atomic activities.

The Europeans say Iran must provide “objective guarantees” it is not pursuing the bomb — which they say can be nothing short of a termination of enrichment. Iran says increased inspections and limits on enrichment levels would suffice.

(Additional reporting by Louis Charbonneau in Vienna)

Latest news

Amnesty International Calls Halting the Death Sentence of Toomaj Salehi

On Thursday, May 17, Amnesty International sent a letter to the head of the Iranian regime’s judiciary, calling for...

Around 6 Workers Die of Safety Incidents Every Day in Iran

Ali Ziaei, the head of the Crime Scene Investigation Group at the Iranian Forensics Organization, reported the deaths of...

Air Pollution Kills 26,000 People in Iran Every Year: Head of Environment Organization

Ali Salajegheh, the head of the Environmental Protection Organization admitted in a conference in Kerman on Monday, May 13...

Australia Sanctions Iranian Regime Navy and IRGC Commanders

On Tuesday, May 15, the Australian Government imposed targeted sanctions on five Iranian individuals and three entities, in response...

Iranian Regime Sabotage Plot Neutralized in Jordan

According to informed Jordanian sources, security authorities thwarted a suspicious plot led by the Iranian regime to smuggle weapons...

Iran Facing Infant Formula Scarcity Again

Iranian media have reported a new increase in the price of infant formula and announced that this trend has...

Must read

Iran’s hard-line judge pays fine for murder of young man

Iran Focus: Tehran, Oct. 23 – A court ruling...

Soccer-Iran coaching turmoil continues

Reuters: Iran remain without a head coach after the...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you

Exit mobile version