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Iran's leader: Obama wrong to say nuke site hidden
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 03 - 10 - 2009


Iran's president hit back Saturday at
President Barack Obama's accusation that his country had
sought to hide its construction of a new nuclear site,
arguing that Tehran reported the facility to the U.N. even
earlier than required, according to AP.
The Iranian president defended his government's actions as
the head of the U.N.'s nuclear monitoring agency, Mohamed
ElBaradei, arrived Saturday to arrange an inspection of the
uranium enrichment facility near the holy city of Qom.
The revelation that Iran has been building a new nuclear
plant has heightened the concern of the U.S. and many of
its allies, which suspect Tehran is using a civilian
nuclear program as a cover for developing a weapons-making
capability. Iran denies such an aim, saying it only wants
to generate energy.
Obama and the leaders of France and Britain accused Iran
of keeping the construction hidden from the world for
years. The U.S. president said last month that Iran's
actions «raised grave doubts» about its promise to use
nuclear technology for peaceful purposes only.
ElBaradei, the head of the International Atomic Energy
Agency, has also said Tehran was «on the wrong side of the
law» over the new plant and should have revealed its plans
as soon as it decided to build the facility.
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad challenged that view in a
speech Saturday, saying that Iran voluntarily revealed the
facility to the IAEA in a letter on Sept. 21. He said that
was one year earlier than necessary under the agency's
rules.
«The U.S. president made a big and historic mistake,»
Iranian state TV quoted Ahmadinejad as saying. «Later it
became clear that (his) information was wrong and that we
had no secrecy.»
White House spokesman Tom Vietor said the administration
had no comment on Ahmadinejad's remarks.
Iran agreed to allow U.N. inspectors into the facility at
a landmark meeting with six world powers near Geneva on
Thursday that put nuclear talks back on track and included
the highest-level bilateral contact with the U.S. in three
decades.
Iranian officials argue that under IAEA safeguard rules, a
member nation is required to inform the U.N. agency about
the existence of a nuclear facility six months before
introducing nuclear material into the machines. Iran says
the new facility won't be operational for 18 months, and so
it has not violated any IAEA requirements.
The IAEA has said that Iran is obliged under the
Additional Protocol to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
to notify the organization when it begins to design a new
nuclear facility.
Iran says it voluntarily implemented the Additional
Protocol for 2 1/2 years as a confidence-building gesture,
but its parliament passed legislation in 2007 forcing the
government to end such cooperation after the country was
referred to the U.N. Security Council for sanctions over
its refusal to suspend uranium enrichment.
The IAEA has countered by saying that a government cannot
unilaterally abandon such an agreement.
Suspicion that Iran's newly revealed nuclear site was
meant for military purposes was heightened by its location,
at least partly inside a mountain and next to a military
base.
Iran has said it built the facility in such a way only to
ensure continuity of its nuclear activities in case of an
attack.
«Some are allowing themselves to threaten our legal
facilities with military attack, and so we are going to
come up with security measures for our nuclear
facilities,» Iran's senior nuclear negotiator, Saeed
Jalili, said Friday after returning from the talks in
Switzerland. «One of them is that we need to have a
facility for uranium enrichment with a higher level of
security and that's why we decided to establish the new
facility that is under construction.»
An IAEA spokesman said that in addition to the new nuclear
facility, ElBaradei will also discuss a plan to allow
Russia to take some of Iran's processed uranium and enrich
it to higher levels to fuel a research reactor in Tehran.
Western officials said Iran agreed to the plan at
Thursday's meeting, a potentially significant move that
would show greater flexibility by both sides.
Obama noted the deal in comments on the meeting. But Mehdi
Saffare, Iran's ambassador to Britain and a member of the
Iranian delegation at the talks, said Iran had not yet
agreed to such a plan.
The Obama administration, together with the U.S. Congress,
is drawing up plans for tough new sanctions if the talks
with Iran show signs of faltering. Obama said the new
penalties could target Iran's energy, financial and
telecommunications sectors.
A congressional committee will hold a hearing Tuesday on
the possibility of expanding sanctions to cover a wider
range of financial transactions, including a new ban on
exporting refined petroleum to Iran.


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