Report: Iran Building Powerful Nuclear Device
Iran is planning to build a nuclear bomb with at least triple the force of the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima in World War II, diagrams show
First Publish: 11/27/2012, 9:12 PM
The Bushehr nuclear power plant in southern Iran
AFP/Mehr News/File
The diagrams discovered by the IAEA show
Iranian scientists calculating the desired "nuclear explosive yield" in a
device they were apparently working on. IAEA inspectors described the diagrams in a report, and a senior official who is working with the Geneva-based UN organization confirmed that the diagrams obtained by AP were the same ones mentioned in the report.
The diagrams showed a scientific
calculation of the expected yield of a nuclear device, with a maximum
force of 50 kilotons, experts who saw the AP diagrams said. There was no possibility that the diagrams referred to a process other than construction of a nuclear weapon, the experts said.
If Iran is indeed designing
a nuclear weapon with a 50 kiloton yield, it will be significantly
stronger than the bombs that were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in
Japan during World War II, which were only 15 kilotons powerful. Nuclear
weapons held by the U.S., Russia, and other countries are significantly
stronger than a bomb with a 50 kiloton yield.
Iran, meanwhile, said Tuesday that it had filed complaints
with the United Nations over what it said were violations of its
airspace by U.S. planes. Iran said that U.S. planes and drones had
violated Iranian airspace eight times in October.
“In two separate letters to the United
Nations secretary general (Ban Ki-moon) and the United Nations Security
Council, Iran has mentioned the cases
of violation of its airspace and has called on these international
bodies to warn U.S. officials about this issue so that we will not
witness the repetition of such incidents and the violation of Iranian
airspace in the future,” said Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin
Mehmanparast on Tuesday. Any country that violates Iranian airspace, he
said, could expect “strong measures” to be taken against their planes or
drones.
Labels: Crisis Politics, Iran, Islamism, Nuclear Technology, United Nations
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