The
nuclear watchdog also gave details of its mission to Tehran this week
where Iran failed to respond to allegations of research relevant to
developing nuclear arms - a blow to the possible resumption of
diplomatic talks that could help calm worries about a new war in the
Middle East.
"The Agency continues to have serious concerns
regarding possible military dimensions to Iran's nuclear programme," the
International Atomic Energy Agency said in a quarterly report about
Iran issued to member states.
Iran's increase of work that can
have both civilian and military purposes underlines that it has no
intention of backing down in a long-running dispute with the West that
has sparked fears of war.
U.S. crude futures extended a rally on
the IAEA's findings, which added to concerns that Iran's tensions with
the West would escalate. It gained more than $2 to hit the highest
intraday price in nine months.
The White House said the IAEA
report confirmed that Iran was violating U.N. Security Council
resolutions with its nuclear enrichment program.
"When combined
with its continued stonewalling of international inspectors, Iran's
actions demonstrate why Iran has failed to convince the international
community that its nuclear program is peaceful," White House National
Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor said in a statement.
In
what would be a big expansion, Iran has increased the number of
centrifuge machines enriching uranium - material that can be used to
make atomic bombs if refined much further - by well over a third since
late last year, the report indicated.
Preparatory work to install
thousands more centrifuges is under way, potentially shortening the
time needed to make high-grade uranium for nuclear weapons.
Tehran
says its nuclear programme is exclusively for civilian purposes, but
its refusal to curb enrichment has drawn increasingly tough sanctions on
its oil exports.
Iran's ambassador to the IAEA said the report
had vindicated its position and insisted Tehran had no intention of
giving up its nuclear march.
"The IAEA report indicated that all
Iran's nuclear activities are under the supervision of the agency," the
semi-official Fars news agency quoted Ali Asghar Soltanieh as saying.
"It shows again that Iran's nuclear activity is peaceful."
DUTY
Israel, which has threatened Iran with pre-emptive strikes on its nuclear sites, had no immediate comment.
Israeli
Defence Minister Ehud Barak has warned that the Islamic state's nuclear
research could soon pass into what he called a "zone of immunity,"
protected from outside disruption.
The European Union's foreign
policy chief, Catherine Ashton, said the IAEA report increased concerns
over the real purpose of Iran's nuclear programme.
Ashton, who
represents the United States, Russia, China, Germany, France and Britain
in stalled talks with Iran, also urged Tehran to cooperate fully with
the IAEA.
"The findings of this new IAEA report contribute to
further increased concerns on the exclusively peaceful nature of the
Iranian nuclear programme," Ashton's spokeswoman said.
"Iran has to address all existing concerns and to build confidence in the nature of its nuclear programme."
The
confidential IAEA report showed that Iran since last November had
tripled monthly output of uranium refined to a level that brings it
significantly closer to potential bomb material, an official familiar
with the agency's probe said.
"The concern is that they are
trying to give the impression that they are putting in the capability
that could much more quickly make weapon-grade uranium," nuclear
proliferation expert David Albright said.
"This could all be
posturing to show further defiance, but unfortunately it does concern
many countries about what is Iran planning." Albright added that Iran
seemed to have problems developing newer and more efficient centrifuges.
NUCLEAR WORK IN BUNKER
The
failure of the two-day IAEA visit to Tehran this week could hamper any
resumption of wider nuclear negotiations between Iran and the six world
powers as the sense grows that Tehran feels it is being backed into a
corner.
The IAEA team sought answers from Iran raised by a
previous agency report in November that suggested it had pursued
military nuclear technology. Those findings helped to precipitate the
latest sanctions by the EU and United States.
Making clear the
two sides had been far apart, the IAEA report said there were major
differences on how to tackle the issue and that Iran had dismissed the
U.N. agency's concerns as "unfounded." No further meetings are planned.
IAEA
Director General Yukiya Amano urged Iran in the report to provide
"early access" to Parchin, a military site near Tehran seen as central
to the agency's investigations into possible military aspects of Iran's
nuclear work.
His agency's report showed Iran had carried out an
expansion of activities both at its main enrichment plant near the
central city of Natanz and at the Fordow underground site.
Enriched
uranium can be used to fuel nuclear power plants, which is Iran's
stated aim, or provide material for bombs if refined much further, which
the West suspects is Tehran's ultimate plan.
At Natanz, the IAEA
report said Iran had declared that 52 cascades - each containing about
170 centrifuges - were now operating, up from 37 in November. At Fordow,
about 700 centrifuges are now refining uranium to a fissile
concentration of 20 percent and preparations are under way to install
more.
Fordow is of particular concern for the West and Israel as
Iran is shifting the most sensitive aspect of its nuclear work, 20
percent enrichment, to the site.
Estimated to be buried beneath
80 metres (265 feet) of rock and soil, it gives Iran better protection
against any Israeli or U.S. military strikes.
Nuclear bombs
require uranium enriched to 90 percent, but Western experts say much of
the effort required to get there is already achieved once it reaches 20
percent concentration, shortening the time needed for any nuclear
weapons "break-out."
The IAEA said Iran had now produced nearly
110 kg (240 pounds) of uranium enriched to 20 percent since early 2010.
Western experts say about 250 kg (550 pounds) are needed for a nuclear
weapon, although it would need to be enriched much further.
(Additional
reporting by Mitra Amiri in Tehran, Tabassum Zakaria, Missy Ryan and
Caren Bohan in Washington and Justyna Pawlak in Brussels; Editing by
Robin Pomeroy and Peter Cooney)
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