Western Iran: President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad gestures as he greet supporters on Wednesday. Ahmadinejad said that the US intelligence review concluding that Iran stopped developing an atomic weapons program in 2003 was actually a "declaration of victory," for Iran's nuclear program.
Western Iran: President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad gestures as he greet supporters on Wednesday. Ahmadinejad said that the US intelligence review concluding that Iran stopped developing an atomic weapons program in 2003 was actually a "declaration of victory," for Iran's nuclear program.
Mehdi Ghasemi/AP

Iran's nuclear know-how unimpeded

As its atomic power research proceeds, Tehran can still gain the expertise needed for a bomb.

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Reporter Peter Grier discusses international efforts to prevent countries from obtaining materials that can be used to make nuclear weapons.

At a remote site 200 miles south of Tehran, Iranian scientists are learning more about the basic means to build a nuclear weapon every day.

The facility – named Natanz, after the nearest town – is where Iran has begun the process of producing fissile material. Thousands of thin, vertical tubes spin at outrageous speeds, atom by atom enriching raw uranium gas into more useful material.

Iranian officials say Natanz will make low-enriched uranium to use in civil power plants. And the just-released assessment by US intelligence agencies concludes that Iran has indeed put its covert weapons program on hold.

But developing the technology to enrich uranium is perhaps the most difficult step in a nuclear weapons – or civilian power – program. According to administration officials and outside experts, it is possible that Tehran has simply decided it does not need to proceed with actual bomb work, at least for now.

"Iranian leaders appear to have recognized that by staying within the rules they can acquire capabilities sufficient to impress their own people and intimidate their neighbors, without inviting tough international sanctions or military attack," concludes George Perkovich, director of the nonproliferation program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, in an assessment of the US National Intelligence Estimate's (NIE) revelations.

As of now the US intelligence has high confidence that Iran has not produced enough highly enriched fissile material for a nuclear weapon. The earliest it would be able to do so is probably within the 2010 to 2015 time frame, according to the new NIE.

And if Iran does decide to develop nuclear weapons, scientists would most likely use centrifuge technology, which they are currently working on at Natanz.

"Iranian entities are continuing to develop a range of technical capabilities that could be applied to producing nuclear weapons," says the NIE.

Iran has long claimed that its enrichment program is intended for civilian purposes. Iranian officials say they only want to learn how to produce fissionable fuel for power plants, as they are allowed to do under terms of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

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