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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
US shows new evidence of Iranian nuclear program
2005-11-13
New evidence suggests Iran has made significant progress in its pursuit of nuclear weapons and that should strengthen the case for increasing international pressure on Tehran to end the program, U.S. and European officials say.

The data, which in recent months was shared with the International Atomic Energy Agency and key countries, is "not definitive (but) it is strongly suggestive that Iran has made significant advancement toward weaponisation," one U.S. official told Reuters.

Another U.S. official said that "no one is portraying this as definitive (but) it's one more piece of a strong circumstantial case that they are pursing a nuclear weapon."

The officials, who asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the issue, gave no details of the documents.

Nuclear experts have been saying for months that the fact that U.S. claims about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction capabilities proved largely false is fueling doubts about intelligence on Iran.

The New York Times reported on its Web site on Saturday that in mid-July, senior American intelligence officials called the leaders of the IAEA to the top of a skyscraper overlooking the Danube in the Austrian capital Vienna and unveiled the contents of what they said was a stolen Iranian laptop computer.

The Americans showed data from more than 1,000 pages of Iranian computer simulations and accounts of experiments, saying they showed a long effort to design a nuclear warhead, the newspaper reported, quoting European and American participants in the meeting.

The newspaper said the U.S. officials argued the data was "the strongest evidence yet that, despite Iran's insistence that its nuclear program is peaceful, the country is trying to develop a compact warhead to fit atop its Shahab missile, which can reach Israel and other countries in the Middle East."

Iran, which kept a uranium enrichment program secret for 18 years until 2003, is facing referral to the U.N. Security Council for possible sanctions after failing to convince the international community its nuclear ambitions are entirely peaceful.

The New York Times said Iranian officials denied any knowledge of the warhead plans.

"We are sure that there are no such documents in Iran," the paper quoted Ali Larijani, Iran's chief nuclear negotiator, as saying in an interview in Tehran. "I have no idea what they have or what they claim to have. We just hear the claims."

A U.S. official and a European official told Reuters that technical experts, including at the IAEA, who got the briefing were quite concerned at what the data shows.

But The New York Times said that apart from Britain, France and Germany -- which have joined Washington in demanding that Iran halt suspicious nuclear activities -- other countries remain skeptical.

Shahin Gobadi, a spokesman for an Iranian opposition group which first disclosed Tehran's secret activities in 2002 and has since revealed other details of the nuclear program, said his group was not the source of the stolen laptop.

But Gobadi said in a telephone interview and an e-mail from Paris that his group, the National Council of Resistance of Iran, had also acquired evidence Iran "is working on nuclear warheads."

The nuclear warhead project is being carried out by Shahid Karimi Industrial Group in the Hemmat Complex, northeast of Tehran, said Gobadi, whose group is on the U.S. State Department list of terrorist organizations.

Nuclear warheads and missiles are also being developed at the Parchin military site, 20 miles (30 km) southeast of Tehran, he said.

By reverse-engineering a cruise missile it obtained from Ukraine, Iran has "mastered the technology to produce (nuclear-capable) cruise missiles and is making great progress toward this end," Gobadi said.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#9  The New York Times reported on its Web site on Saturday that in mid-July, senior American intelligence officials called the leaders of the IAEA to the top of a skyscraper overlooking the Danube in the Austrian capital Vienna and unveiled the contents of what they said was a stolen Iranian laptop computer.

Someone has been watching far too many B movies.
Posted by: Besoeker   2005-11-13 19:33  

#8  Simple fact: There are mosques in Israel. How many synagogues are their in Iran, Saudi Arabia or the Palestinian Terrortories?

[/feeding session]
Posted by: Zenster   2005-11-13 18:52  

#7  urgetoprattle has a point... it is very a-skeered of Israel.
Posted by: .com   2005-11-13 18:51  

#6  Yes, speculation at a time when such is to be expected. Israel certainly knew how to do the "right thing" when they built their illegal arsenal of nuclear weapons (still denying it are they not?). They knew how to get them built before anyone suspected a thing! Of course, there was probably more willingness to not notice with Israel than with Iran. And certainly no motivation in the West to speculate in the press about it.
Posted by: willtotruth   2005-11-13 18:43  

#5  Shahid Karimi Industrial Group

Contractors are always to blame.
Posted by: Besoeker   2005-11-13 18:36  

#4  Can we take 'em down yet?
Posted by: Captain America   2005-11-13 18:04  

#3  Anything else new? Nutty Iranis?
Yawn. Hoo-boy. Just get them!
Posted by: OnlySaneAnonymouseLeft   2005-11-13 11:58  

#2  The officials, who asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the issue, gave no details of the documents.

Another non-indentified source making vague allegations with no evidence to support their claims.
Posted by: DepotGuy   2005-11-13 10:50  

#1  All of this is just noise. The UN, Euro's, American MSM & Lefties will accept nothing less than NYC under a mushroom cloud delivered by The Iranian president himself before realizing Iran has nuclear ambitions.
The only one's that can be depended on in this to do the right thing are the Israeli's.
Posted by: JerseyMike   2005-11-13 08:23  

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