Iran’s newest nuclear advances could stoke tensions

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WASHINGTON (MCT) — Nuclear advances trumpeted Wednesday by Iran were not unexpected and their announcement may have been driven by domestic Iranian politics, but they still could add to tensions over that country’s nuclear program, U.S. officials and experts said.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said the country had installed 3,000 new centrifuges for processing nuclear fuel, had for the first time successfully installed Iranian-produced fuel rods in a research reactor, and would embark next year on the production of yellow cake, a concentrated powder made from uranium ore and used in the enrichment process.

At the same time, Iran said that it would end oil sales to six European nations if they refuse to sign long-term contracts and move to implement an embargo on Iranian oil scheduled to take effect in July.

“We do not have any problem in terms of finding customers for our oil and selling it to other countries,” the state-run news agency quoted a Foreign Ministry official, Hassan Tajik, as saying after meeting separately with the ambassadors of France, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain, Portugal and Greece.

Iranian media portrayed the nuclear developments as showing that Iran has mastered the process that transforms uranium ore into low-enriched uranium, the fuel that powers nuclear reactors. The same process also produces highly enriched uranium for nuclear weapons.

But David Albright, a former U.N. nuclear inspector who heads the Washington-based Institute for Science and International Security, said that “none of these (announcements) are a surprise.” Other analysts pointed out that they came just two weeks before parliamentary polls and may be part of a bid by Ahmadinejad to boost his loyalists against archconservative candidates loyal to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, with whom Ahmadinejad has had a serious split.

“Iranians have endured tremendous hardships as a result of their government’s nuclear intransigence, and the regime has to show to the public that there have been some benefits,” said Karim Sadjadpour of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, referring to international sanctions slapped on Iran for defying U.N. demands to halt its nuclear program.

The Obama administration also saw Ahmadinejad’s announcements as aimed at diverting popular attention from the impact of U.N., U.S. and European Union sanctions, which have begun choking Iran’s access to hard cash and forced the devaluation of the Iranian rial.

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