The International Atomic Energy report
issued in Vienna said Tehran is holding back information on
high-explosives testing relating to its nuclear programme and it should provide
more information on its missile-related activities, Reuters reported.
“I think right now the Iranians have a lot
of explaining to do about the IAEA report, which essentially sees them as not
cooperating on some very important dark questions that the international community
has about their programmes,” Rice told reporters on her plane on the way to an
international conference on Iraq in Stockholm, according to the same source.
Teheran had 3,500 uranium enrichment
centrifuges working at the Natanz nuclear facility, the report said. Iran has
doubled its ability to enrich uranium. Theoretically, enriched uranium could be
turned into an atomic bomb as well as into nuclear fuel.
Iran
denied the allegations that it was seeking to build a bomb, saying they were “baseless.”
Iran says its nuclear program is aimed at peaceful ends, but the United States
and other western countries say it seeks nuclear weapons.
“The Iranians are certainly being
confronted with some pretty strong evidence of a nuclear weapons program, and
they are being petulant and defensive,” said David Albright, a former weapons
inspector who now runs the Institute for Science and International Security,
according to the New York Times.
The report also accused Iran of lack of
cooperation, especially in answering allegations that the nuclear program may
be intended for military use. Iran
has dismissed the documents as “forged” or “fabricated.”
“Iran has refused to explain or even
acknowledge past work on weaponization ... This is particularly troubling when
combined with determined efforts to master the technology to enrich uranium,” Gregory
L. Schulte, the chief U.S. delegate to the agency, told the Associated Press.
Iran says
its uranium enrichment program is aimed solely at producing fuel for nuclear
reactors that generate electricity.