Iran Military Developments

Would Iran having a Nuclear Bomb benefit India vis-a-vis Pakistan?

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AirforcePilot

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U.S. Missile Shield in Gulf Ups Ante With Iran

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/02/01/missile-shield-gulf-ups-ante-iran/?test=latestnews

Tensions between the U.S. and Iran rose Monday after the Obama Administration quietly increased the capability of land and sea-based missile defenses in several Gulf nations to protect American allies against a potential Iranian strike.

Administration officials said over the weekend that the U.S. was speeding up arms sales to a number of Gulf Arab states and that it had also deployed warships capable of knocking down hostile missiles in flight to the region.

Two senior defense officials told Fox News on Monday that missile-defense systems, including sea-based Aegis destroyers and Patriot missiles, are being sent to the Gulf region. One official said the build-up was "previewed in the president's strategy on missile defense last year."

The moves, which include the sales of anti-missile systems to Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait, are designed to deter Iran from launching attacks against its Sunni Muslim neighbors and to send a message to Israel that a preemptive strike against Iran is unnecessary.

The deployments come as President Obama enters a new phase in efforts to halt Iran's nuclear program after the failure of a diplomatic offensive. Washington is anxious to get a tough new round of U.N. sanctions against Tehran, something that China and Russia have shown little interest in backing.

The new arms sales build on deals struck by Former President George W. Bush to develop a deterrent among the region's Sunni nations, including Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, against the predominantly Shia Iran.

The UAE and Saudi Arabia have bought more than $25 billion of U.S. arms in the past two years.

Abu Dhabi has bought $17 billion of U.S. hardware since 2008, including Patriot anti-missile systems, while the UAE as a whole recently bought 80 F-16 jets.

The administration will send a review of ballistic missile strategy to Congress on Monday that frames the larger shifts. Attention to defense of the Persian Gulf region, a focus on diffuse networks of sensors and weapons and cooperation with Russia are major elements of the study, according to documents obtained by The Associated Press.

Russia opposed Bush administration plans for a land-based missile defense site in Eastern Europe, and Obama's decision to walk away from that plan last year was partly in pursuit of new capabilities that might hold greater promise and partly in deference to Russia.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton consulted with numerous allies during a visit to London this week. She told reporters that the evident failure of U.S. offers to engage Iran in negotiations over its nuclear program means the U.S. will now press for additional sanctions against the Iranian government.

Gen. David Petraeus, the U.S. Central Command chief who is responsible for U.S. military operations across the Middle East, mentioned in several recent public speeches one element of the defensive strategy in the Gulf: upgrading Patriot missile systems, which originally were deployed in the region to shoot down aircraft but now can hit missiles in flight.

In remarks at Georgetown Law School on Jan. 21, Petraeus said the U.S. now has eight Patriot missile batteries stationed in the Gulf region -- two each in four countries. He did not name the countries, but Kuwait has long been known to have Patriots on its territory.

A military official said Saturday that the three other countries are the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain -- which also hosts the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet headquarters -- and Qatar, home to a modernized U.S. air operations center that has played a key role in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

In a presentation Jan. 22 at the Institute for the Study of War, Petraeus explicitly linked the actions to concerns about Iran.

"Iran is clearly seen as a very serious threat by those on the other side of the Gulf front, and, indeed, it has been a catalyst for the implementation of the architecture that we envision and have now been trying to implement," he said.

He said that "architecture" includes the extra Patriot batteries "that weren't there, say, two years ago."

"Other countries have certainly increased their Patriots, a whole host of different systems; Aegis ballistic missile cruisers are in the Gulf at all times now," Petraeus added.

The Aegis ships are equipped with a missile known as the SM-3, which gained international acclaim in February 2008 when a souped-up version was launched from a Navy cruiser in the Pacific and shot down a failing U.S. satellite in space.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates has spoken publicly about a new approach to missile defenses, both in Europe and the Gulf.

"I don't want to get into it in too much detail," Gates said in September. "but the reality is we are working both on a bilateral and a multilateral basis in the Gulf to establish the same kind of regional missile defense that would protect our facilities out there as well as our friends and allies."

Gates said the adjusted approach is based in part on a belief by U.S. intelligence that Iran has not been progressing as fast as previously believed on development of a long-range ballistic missile, but is concentrating more heavily on short- and medium-range missiles of the sort that the Patriot and the Aegis systems are designed to defend against.

The Times of London and Associated Press contributed to this report.
 

Singh

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@airforcepilot

Sir, The penny pinching Mullahs are crazy but are not stupid. In fact a strong Israel gives Iran protection from its enemies and a belligerent Iran gives legitimacy to Israeli military programmes. They both reinforce each other.

These are Diversionary tactics. The opposition is breathing down their necks and they want a distraction. Its main aim would be to achieve the following
frighten the opposition,
let the arabs know they still got it
and rally support of dehatis (villagers who form the backbone of support) and basij (militia)
 

Singh

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A war may force the opposition to give up and rally behind the regime or can backfire and plunge the nation into a civil war. IN Iran
Persians are outnumbered by non-persians.

Many Azeris resent the Persianess that is forced down their "Turkish" throats though many are deeply religious too.
Lurs are neglected
Not sure about Gilakis
Baloch are waging a separatist insurgency
Urban Persians are fighting the mullahs
Kurds want a seperate Kurdistan
Arabs are looked upon with suspicion

PS: Iran has a major drug, unemployment and inflation problem too.
 

Rage

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'Telling blow' ? Sounds like the kinda trick my girlfriend would be interested in.

From what I've heard, Iran's 'telling blow' may be the deployment of some military hardware across the Persian Gulf region, nothing more. Then again, DEBKA (that 'Political Analysis, Terrorism, Espionage and Security' "authority") declares that " US intelligence finds 5,000 Hizballah trained to seize Galilee towns ".
 

ahmedsid

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Singhji, you are correct. The Iranians are not Stupid. What I expect them to do is either show up with some "New" planes or tanks, OR Test a Long Range Missile. It can be either of these two. I dont think there is any chance of a war, started by them or their proxies. The Hizbollah are on high alert I hear due to some military maneuvers by Israel near the border. If it comes to a war, I am sure, Iran wont be a party to it, because they just aint Saddam!
 

ahmedsid

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Most of Iran's missile Program are based on Modified scud desings and those of DPRK orgin

http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/iran/missile.htm
Yeah, it must be, but they have grown beyond being just scuds, there are Solid Fuelled ones capable of long range, and like I said, these missiles are enough to Hold a Small country with dense population at Ransom. When these are targeted with Biological or Nuclear warheads, it doesnt make a difference, whether its a scud or a minutemen. I for one wouldnt play down Iranian missiles as just scuds for this very reason. God Speed.
 

Pintu

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Iran says that they have launched a satellite , now actually what they have launched, :confused:

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jDJTHPpLUYb3WUzzphdkkrcO9HPA

Iran hails successful satellite launch

By Farhad Pouladi (AFP) – 4 hours ago

TEHRAN — Iran hailed the successful launch of a home-built satellite on Wednesday amid Western concerns it is using its nuclear and space industries to develop atomic and ballistic weapons.

The Kavoshgar 3 (Explorer) rocket was carrying an "experimental capsule", state-owned Al-Alam television reported.

State television's website said it was carrying "live animals" -- a rat, turtles and worms, the first such experiment by Iran in space technology.

"The capsule has the ability to send back empirical data," the website said.

State television showed footage of the rocket being fired from a desert launchpad leaving behind a thick plume of smoke.

A few minutes later the grainy images showed the capsule detaching from the rocket and spinning in orbit.

State television also carried pictures of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad unveiling another home-built rocket for satellite launches dubbed the Simorgh (Phoenix).

The milk-bottle shaped rocket, emblazoned in blue with the words "Satellite Carrier Simorgh," is equipped to carry a 100-kilogramme (220-pound) satellite 500 kilometres (310 miles) into orbit, the television report said.

The 27-metre (90 foot) tall multi-stage rocket weighs 85 tonnes and its liquid fuel propulsion system has a thrust of up to 100 tonnes, the report added.

Ahmadinejad hailed the progress Iran was making in its space programme.

"It is a great job that living organisms can be sent into space, we do experiments on them and they return to earth," the Iranian president said.

"We are going to send a satellite 500 kilometres (310 miles) up. The next steps are 700 and 1,000 kilometres. Everyone knows that reaching the 1,000 kilometre orbit allows you to reach all orbits."

Defence Minister Ahmad Vahidi revealed the details of three new satellite prototypes -- the Toloo (Dawn), Navid (Good News), and Mesbah-2 (Lantern).

"Toloo is a satellite used for remote survey and weighs 100 kilogrammes (220 pounds). It is planned to be placed in 500 kilometre (310 mile) orbit for three years," Vahidi said.

"The Simorgh (Phoenix) rocket is able to place a satellite weighing 100 kilos in 500 kilometre orbit," Vahidi said, adding that a further refinement of the same design would allow satellites to placed in 1,000 kilometre orbit.

The satellite launch and the unveiling of the new prototypes came as Iran marked "Space Technology Day" as part of celebrations for the 31st anniversary of the Islamic revolution.

Iran launched its first home-built satellite, the Omid (Hope), in February last year to coincide with the 30th anniversary.

In 2008, Iran fired two rockets into space -- the Kavoshgar in February and the Kavoshgar 2 in November -- but neither was carrying any payload.

Iran said the Kavoshgar reached an altitude of 200 kilometres (125 miles) before falling back to earth.

Iran's space programme has sent alarm bells ringing in the international community, which has voiced concern over Iran's development of technology that could be used for military purposes.

The West suspects Iran of secretly trying to build an atomic bomb and fears the technology used to launch space rockets could be diverted into developing long-range ballistic missiles capable of carrying nuclear warheads.

Tehran denies having military goals for its space programme or its nuclear drive.
Regards
 

neo29

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I think iran will do a nuclear test on feb 11th. wonder if they manage to make a nuclear bomb , but they are capable of it.

apart from that it may be long range missile testing or some weapon of some kind.

nevertheless anything to provoke the US will invite hard sanctions and criticizing from anyone.
 

Pintu

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Video link of AP posted in You Tube :


Regards
 
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ahmedsid

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Yeah, the Satellite was the telling blow! Is it a success? Any reports on that?
 

ahmedsid

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I cant make up my mind, with this Satellite Launch, Iran is in an Elite Club. I am waiting for some Independent verification of the claims. The Iranians are a very hardworking bunch, you give them a scud, they give you a satellite! I mean, I have read reports of NKorea giving them missile tech, but now again I read of reports saying Nkorea is asking for Solid Fuel tech from Iran, which is Superior to theirs! You got to give it to them!
 

Rage

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Not bad Iran! So they did launch a satellite! RiaNovosti claims the Kvsh-3 carried an "experimental capsule" and unveiled a "new domestically built, satellite booster Rocket", the Simorgh, capable of carrying a 100kg payload up to 500 km in exosphere.


Iran successfully launches satellite

12:3603/02/2010

Iran said on Wednesday it had successfully launched a satellite carrying an "experimental capsule" as part of events to mark the anniversary of the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

State media said the domestically-built Kavoshgar-3 (Explorer-3) rocket was carrying a rat, a turtle and worms into space for research purposes. The rocket transfers telemetric data, live pictures and flight and environmental analysis data.

Kavoshgar 3 is an updated version of the previous models. Iran blasted Kavoshgar 1 into space in February 2008. Kavoshgar 2, carrying a space-lab and a restoration system, was launched in November 2008.

In other space-related events in Iran, national media showed President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad unveiling a new domestically-built satellite booster rocket, Simorgh, capable of carrying a 100-kg satellite up to 500 km above the planet.

The Islamic Republic also presented the domestically-produced Tolou, Mesbah-2 and Navid telecommunication satellites.

Western powers suspect Iran of using its space program to develop its missile capabilities. Iran has denied the charge.

Iran's first research satellite, Omid (Hope), designed for gathering information and testing equipment, was orbited last February and successfully completed its mission on April 25, 2009.

In 2005, Iran launched its first commercial satellite, Sina-1, into orbit from a Russian rocket.

Iran is expected to unveil five space projects during Feb 2-11 celebrations to mark the 31st anniversary of the Islamic Revolution.

MOSCOW, February 3 (RIA Novosti)
http://en.rian.ru/world/20100203/157760249.html

A video of the actual satellite launch here: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/7866357.stm

Alternative:
http://www.boston.com/news/world/mi.../04/iran_launches_first_successful_satellite/
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/feb/03/iran-satellite-launch-omid
http://www.france24.com/en/20100203-iran-successfully-launches-satellite-rocket-tv
 

ahmedsid

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Iran has definitely given a blow, we all know Iran is perfecting their Missile Programme! These people are pretty good, must give it to them! I am impressed, because they have been under a lot of sanctions and all, but still did it!
 

AirforcePilot

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Iran's Rocket to Nowhere.

Iran successfully launched a research rocket into outer space carrying a mouse, two turtles and worms Wednesday, but failed to put anything into orbit, two U.S. officials tell Fox News. Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad described the launch as a "very big event" and said it shows Iran can compete with the West in a battle of science and technology.

One U.S. official told Fox today’s launch failed to demonstrate any advancement in Iranian rocket or missile capabilities. One year ago, Iran managed to put its first domestically made satellite, called Omid, into orbit for 40 days before it fell back to Earth. In December, Iran tested a medium range missile at roughly 1,500 kilometers, but to date has been unable to launch anything that falls into intermediate or intercontinental category.

It's unclear whether Iran had intentions of putting either research tools or animals into orbit, but U.S. officials say the rocket and all its contents have since returned to Earth. The military and intelligence communities keeps close watch over the Iranian space program because rocket technology tends to mirror that of ballistic missiles.

Iran's defense minister announced today the rocket is called a Kavoshgar-3, which means Explorer-3 in Farsi, and according to U.S. officials, it performed similarly to the Kavoshgar-2 Iran tested in late 2008. That rocket traveled just beyond the Earth's atmosphere into the lower ranges of outer space before returning to Earth on a parachute. Experts say an object only needs to travel roughly 100 kilometers from Earth to reach outer space.

State Department Spokesman PJ Crowley told Fox's Shepard Smith Wednesday that Iran has an aggressive missile program which "threatens countries in the region and potentially threatens Europe as well." Crowley said the U.S. has worked hard to counter threats in the region with its own missile defenses and it still struggles to understand Iran's nuclear aspirations. Last night, President Ahmadinejad caught U.S. diplomats by surprise when he announced on state television he would accept a nuclear fuel-swap agreement overseen by the United Nations. The State Department said today that if Iran is serious about those intentions they need to talk to the IAEA to get the process started.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,584660,00.html
 

Yusuf

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Seriously what's the big security threat from a satellite launch? People tend to get mad at anything Iran does. For me the only big thing is them successfully detonating a nuke. Nothing can be bigger than that as far as the security scenario of the world goes. Launching a 100 kg capsule has no bearing. All countries are entitled to peaceful use of space.
 

ahmedsid

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I was waiting for a Fox Report quoting US officials saying its a failure!!! Well for now, the USA can heave a sigh of relief, and stop saying IRAN is a Threat to the USA and others. What can a country with such dumb missile tech do to you? You can very well shoot the missiles off the map!

Now seriously, last time the Iranians launched the Satellite, I heard CNN say that its a Dud, but here its quoted that the Satellite stayed up for more than a month! Now who do i belive?

One thing is for Sure, the Iranians are doing this to perfect their Missile Technology, and I dont see the harm in it, because I trust them not to be stupid to use the missiles on anybody! They are just all show, and let them have missiles for show! :)

Lastly, This is not the Blow the Iranians were talking about! The Real blow is that the Iranian Crackpot President has agreed to Shift our Nuke fuel and then get it back :) Now you didnt see it coming did you? :D
 

ahmedsid

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Now aint this a Blow!


Iran makes new nuclear offer, U.S. ready to listen


TEHRAN (Reuters) – President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Tuesday Iran was ready to send its enriched uranium abroad in exchange for nuclear fuel, and a U.S. official said Washington was prepared to listen if Iran was making a new offer to break an impasse over its disputed nuclear program.
The president appeared for the first time to drop long-standing conditions Tehran had set for accepting a U.N.-brokered proposal that the West hopes will stop enriched uranium being used to build atomic bombs in Iran.
The U.N. nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), has brokered the proposed plan under which Iran, which denies seeking nuclear weapons, would send its low-enriched uranium abroad in exchange for more highly enriched fuel for a medical research reactor.
"We have no problem sending our enriched uranium abroad," Ahmadinejad told state television.
"We say: we will give you our 3.5 percent enriched uranium and will get the fuel. It may take 4 to 5 months until we get the fuel.
"If we send our enriched uranium abroad and then they do not give us the 20 percent enriched fuel for our reactor, we are capable of producing it inside Iran," he said.
In Washington, a U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said: "If Iran has something new to say, we are prepared to listen."
Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said the uranium could be exchanged in Turkey, Brazil or Japan if agreement is reached.
Iran has faced intense Western pressure, under threat of new sanctions, to implement the plan and Ahmadinejad's words came with both conciliatory international gestures and uncompromising moves to crack down on opposition protesters at home.
The president offered to swap three detained U.S. citizens charged with spying for jailed Iranians in the United States. At the same time, Iran said it would hang nine more rioters over unrest following a disputed presidential vote last June.
U.S. Vice President Joe Biden said Iran's leaders were "sowing the seeds of their own destruction" through their harsh crackdown on anti-government unrest.
Western powers accuse Iran of trying to develop nuclear weapons under cover of a civilian enrichment program that Tehran says will fuel a future network of nuclear power plants so it can export more oil and gas.
Ahmadinejad's statement on the nuclear issue -- on which Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has the last word -- was apparently the first time a top official had publicly accepted exchanging low-enriched uranium for nuclear medicine fuel off Iranian soil.
"We made a good faith and balanced offer regarding the Tehran research reactor," White House spokesman Mike Hammer said in Washington. "We believe it makes sense for all parties. If Mr. Ahmadinejad's comments reflect an updated Iranian position, we look forward to Iran informing the IAEA."
URANIUM TRANSFER
Mottaki and the IAEA said last week a deal on uranium enrichment was still possible, despite Western diplomats saying Tehran had in effect turned down the proposal.
Under the proposed deal Tehran would transfer 70 percent of its low-enriched uranium (LEU) abroad for conversion into special fuel rods to keep the nuclear medicine reactor running.
The plan aims to reduce Iran's reserves below the quantity needed for the fissile core of a nuclear weapon, if the material were refined to a high degree of purity.
"For us the real matter is to reach an agreement about fuel exchange," Mottaki said in an interview with Turkish television TRT. "If we can reach an agreement on the formula then we can talk about the place. About timing we can always talk. Turkey might be a place, Brazil or Japan might be a place."
The United States and European allies are pursuing broader U.N. sanctions against Iran over its nuclear activity.
The United States, Britain, Germany and France seek a fourth round of U.N. measures against Iran for refusing to halt uranium enrichment as demanded by five Security Council resolutions.
As well as outlining nuclear plans, Ahmadinejad said three U.S. citizens detained in Iran and charged with spying may be swapped with jailed Iranians in the United States.
A U.S. State Department spokesman said Washington would welcome Iranian willingness to resolve the case.
"We do not like to have any person in jail. Some discussions are going on to swap the three with jailed Iranians in America," Ahmadinejad told state television.
The three were detained after they strayed into Iran from northern Iraq at the end of July. Iran has said the three Americans would be put on trial, without giving a date.
CRACKDOWN ON OPPOSITION
Cracking down on internal dissent, Iran said it would soon hang nine more rioters over unrest that erupted after the June presidential vote. The opposition said the poll was rigged.
"Nine others will be hanged soon. The nine, and the two who were hanged on Thursday, were surely arrested in the recent riots and had links to anti-revolutionary groups," said senior judiciary official Ebrahim Raisi, the semi-official Fars news agency reported.
The two men hanged last week were among 11 people sentenced to death on charges including "waging war against God."
The June election gave Ahmadinejad a second term, but sparked the worst internal crisis in the Islamic Republic's history. The government denied any fraud in the voting.
Opposition leader Mirhossein Mousavi, a former prime minister, said the repression showed the 1979 revolution that overthrew the U.S.-backed Shah "had not achieved its goals."
"Filling the prisons and brutally killing protesters show that the root of ... dictatorship remain from the monarchist era," he said on his Kalemeh website.
Biden, speaking on MSNBC, indicated Washington was sticking to its dual track on Iran of diplomacy and sanctions.
"It's time (for the United States) to reach out, demonstrate that we're not the problem, the hand that gets rejected, and be able to have the whole world stay with us ... against the Iranian government," he said.
Asked whether it was time for "regime change" in Iran since President Barack Obama's effort to engage the Islamic republic had failed to make progress, he said:
"The people of Iran are thinking about, the very people marching, they're thinking about regime change."


http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20100203/wl_nm/us_iran_3
 

AirforcePilot

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Iran urged to follow up on nuclear U-turn

ANDREW GULLY
February 4, 2010 - 2:39PM
The United States and key allies urged Iran Wednesday to follow up on a surprise U-turn from President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad by formally committing to a UN-brokered deal to swap enriched uranium for nuclear fuel.

But there was also alarm and the renewed threat of new sanctions as Ahmadinejad's apparent overture to the West on the nuclear issue was quickly followed by a rocket launch into space deemed by the White House "a provocative act."

Ahmadinejad bamboozled his critics on Tuesday by suggesting that a deal struck last October envisaging Iran sending some 70 percent of its low-enriched uranium abroad was suddenly back on.

Conscious his remarks could simply be timed to stave off new sanctions at an upcoming meeting of world powers, the White House urged Iran to contact the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the UN watchdog that brokered the original deal.

"If those comments indicate some sort of change in position for Iran, then president Ahmadinejad should let the IAEA know," said deputy White House spokesman Bill Burton.

Iran needs nuclear fuel to power its UN-monitored reactor, but the West fears its uranium enrichment program is masking efforts to produce atomic weapons -- claims vehemently denied by the Islamic republic.Chronology: The twists and turns of Iran nuclear fuel deal

The IAEA has proposed, in a bid to allay Western fears about Iran's atomic ambitions, that Tehran ship out its low-enriched uranium (LEU) to Russia and France to be further purified into reactor fuel.

Iran, which agreed in principle to the offer during talks with world powers in Geneva in October, later appeared to reject the deal and said it preferred a gradual swap of LEU with fuel -- preferably on Iranian soil.

It had given the West until January 31 to respond to its counter-proposals.

Iran's apparent change of heart received a cautious welcome from the P5+1 -- UN Security Council veto-wielding permanent members Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States plus Germany -- which has been leading international efforts to engage Iran.

Britain's Foreign Office said: "If Iran is willing to take up the IAEA's proposed offer, it would be a positive sign of their willingness to engage with the international community on nuclear issues."

But it said that desire must be made "clear" to the IAEA and Ahmadinejad's comment "does not change" the need for Iran to hold talks with the P5+1.

"Iran has to make concrete commitments to the IAEA and a concrete answer in Vienna is the only measure on which it can be assessed," German government spokesman Ulrich Wilhelm said.

But hours after Ahmadinejad said on state television that Iran would have "no problem" sending its stocks of low-enriched uranium abroad, the launch of a new Iranian space rocket drew fresh international criticism.

"This announcement can only reinforce the concerns of the international community as Iran in parallel develops a nuclear program that has no identifiable civil aims," a French foreign ministry spokesman said.

The launch Wednesday of the Kavoshgar 3 (Explorer) rocket -- a home-built satellite carrying a rat, turtles and worms -- was Iran's first experiment with such space technology.

The West suspects Iran is secretly trying to build an atomic bomb and fears the technology used to launch space rockets could be diverted into developing long-range ballistic missiles capable of carrying nuclear warheads.

Iran strongly denies that either its space or atomic energy programs are intended to build a bomb.

The United States said Tuesday it hoped to consult with China and the other P5+1 powers in coming days on the Iranian nuclear issue, but gave no precise date for a meeting.

If Ahmadinejad was simply paying lip-service to a deal to try and avoid stiffer sanctions then the move appeared to have back-fired.

President Barack Obama's warning last week that Iran's leaders would suffer "growing consequences" if they ignored international obligations meant tough sanctions were in the offing, US Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Wednesday.

"I think in the near-term it's more likely to be severe sanctions imposed partly by the UN Security Council and partly by the United States and like-minded countries," Gates said when asked about Obama's warning.

And French Prime Minister Francois Fillon said he would ask the United Nations to adopt a new resolution against Iran, warning it would include "strong sanctions."

"The Iranian regime has not taken our offers of dialogue... the time has therefore come to react," he said.
http://news.theage.com.au/breaking-news-world/iran-urged-to-follow-up-on-nuclear-uturn-20100204-nf9v.html
 

A.V.

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Iran declares itself a nuclear state


TEHRAN: Iran President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced today that the Islamic republic has produced its first package of highly enriched uranium
just two days after beginning the process.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad today told hundreds of thousands of cheering Iranians on the anniversary of the foundation of the Islamic republic that the country was now a "nuclear state."

"The first package of 20 per cent fuel was produced and provided to the scientists," he said, referring to the recently begun process of enriching Iran's uranium stockpile to higher levels.

Enriching uranium produces fuel for a nuclear power plants but can also be used to create material for atomic weapons. Iran announced Tuesday it was beginning the process of enriching its uranium stockpile to a higher level.

The international community has warned Iran against further enrichment activities, threatening new UN sanctions.

Tehran has said it wants to further enrich the uranium which is still substantially below the 90 per cent plus level used in the fissile core of nuclear warheads, as a part of a plan to fuel its research reactor that provides medical isotopes to hundreds of thousands of Iranians undergoing cancer treatment.

But the West says Tehran is not capable of turning the material into the fuel rods needed by the reactor. Instead it fears that Iran wants to enrich the uranium to make nuclear weapons.


http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...tself-a-nuclear-state/articleshow/5560811.cms
 

Armand2REP

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20% grade and they are a nuclear state.


I guess it is about as close as Shafaq is to F-18s.
 

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