Iran tested advanced nuclear warhead design – secret report

onthebottom

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Obviously a step toward energy production :rolleyes:

OTB

Iran tested advanced nuclear warhead design – secret report
Exclusive: Watchdog fears Tehran has key component to put bombs in missiles

Julian Borger, diplomatic editor
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 5 November 2009 20.45 GMT

The UN's nuclear watchdog has asked Iran to explain evidence suggesting that Iranian scientists have experimented with an advanced nuclear warhead design, the Guardian has learned.

The very existence of the technology, known as a "two-point implosion" device, is officially secret in both the US and Britain, but according to previously unpublished documentation in a dossier compiled by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Iranian scientists may have tested high-explosive components of the design. The development was today described by nuclear experts as "breathtaking" and has added urgency to the effort to find a diplomatic solution to the Iranian nuclear crisis.

The sophisticated technology, once mastered, allows for the production of smaller and simpler warheads than older models. It reduces the diameter of a warhead and makes it easier to put a nuclear warhead on a missile.

Documentation referring to experiments testing a two-point detonation design are part of the evidence of nuclear weaponisation gathered by the IAEA and presented to Iran for its response.

The dossier, titled "Possible Military Dimensions of Iran's Nuclear Program", is drawn in part from reports submitted to it by western intelligence agencies.

The agency has in the past treated such reports with scepticism, particularly after the Iraq war. But its director general, Mohamed ElBaradei, has said the evidence of Iranian weaponisation "appears to have been derived from multiple sources over different periods of time, appears to be generally consistent, and is sufficiently comprehensive and detailed that it needs to be addressed by Iran".

Extracts from the dossier have been published previously, but it was not previously known that it included documentation on such an advanced warhead. "It is breathtaking that Iran could be working on this sort of material," said a European government adviser on nuclear issues.

James Acton, a British nuclear weapons expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said: "It's remarkable that, before perfecting step one, they are going straight to step four or five ... To start with more sophisticated designs speaks of level of technical ambition that is surprising."

Another western specialist with extensive knowledge of the Iranian programme said: "It raises the question of who supplied this to them. Did AQ Khan [a Pakistani scientist who confessed in 2004 to running a nuclear smuggling ring] have access to this, or is it another player?"

The revelation of the documents comes at a time of growing tension. Tehran has so far rejected a deal that would remove most of its enriched uranium stockpile for a year and replace it with nuclear fuel rods which would be much harder to turn into weapons. The Iranian government has also balked at negotiations, which were due to begin last week, over its continued enrichment of uranium, in defiance of UN security council resolutions.

There are fears in Washington and London that if no deal is reached to at least temporarily defuse tensions by the end of December, Israel could set in motion plans to take military action aimed at setting back the Iranian programme by force, with incalculable consequences for the Middle East.

Iran has rejected most of the IAEA material on weaponisation as forgeries, but has admitted carrying out tests on multiple high-explosive detonations synchronised to within a microsecond. Tehran has told the agency that there is a civilian application for such tests, but has so far not provided any evidence for them.

Western weapons experts say there are no such civilian applications, but the use of co-ordinated detonations in nuclear warheads is well known. They compress the fissile core, or pit, of the warhead until it reaches critical mass.

A US national intelligence estimate two years ago said that Iran had explored nuclear warhead design for several years but had probably stopped in 2003. British, French and German officials have said they believe weaponisation continued after that date and may still be continuing.

In September, a German court found a German-Iranian businessman, Mohsen Vanaki, guilty of brokering the sale of dual-use equipment with possible applications in developing nuclear weapons. The equipment included specialised high-speed cameras, of the sort used to develop implosion devices, as well as radiation detectors. According to a report by the Institute for Science and International Security, the German foreign intelligence service, the Bundesnachrichtendienst, testified at the trial that there was evidence that Iran's weapons development was continuing.

The IAEA is seeking to find out what the scientists and the institutions involved in the experiments are doing now, but has so far not been given a response. The agency's repeated requests to interview Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, whose name features heavily in the IAEA's documentation and who is widely seen as the father of the Iranian nuclear programme, have been turned down.

The agency has also asked Iran to explain evidence that a Russian weapons expert helped Iranian technicians to master synchronised high-explosive detonations.

The first implosion devices, like the "Fat Man" bomb dropped on Nagasaki on 9 August 1945, used 32 high-explosive hexagons and pentagons arrayed around a plutonium core like the panels of a football. The IAEA has a five-page document describing experimentation on such a hemispherical array of explosives.

According to a diplomat familiar with the IAEA documentation, the evidence also points to experiments with a two-point detonation system that represents "a more elegant solution" to the challenges of making a nuclear warhead, but it is much harder to achieve. It is used in conjunction with a non-spherical pit, in the shape of a rugby ball, or explosives in that shape wrapped around a spherical pit, and it works by compressing the pit from both ends.The IAEA has expressed "serious concern" about Iran's failure to give an account of the research its scientists have carried out.

Descriptions of "two-point implosion" warheads designs have occasionally appeared in the public domain (there are extensive descriptions on Wikipedia) and they were first developed by US scientists in the 1950s, but it remains an offence for American officials or even non-governmental nuclear experts with security clearance to discuss them.
 

WoodPeckr

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Gotta luv how technology marches on, eh bottie....:cool:
 

fuji

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If the US hadn't invaded Iraq it might be possible to do something about this, but since GWB cried wolf I am guessing now it's time for the wolf to enjoy a nice meal.
 

WoodPeckr

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Kinda looks that way.
 

Aardvark154

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When The Guardian says something unkind about a Communist Regime or any anti-Western regime such as Iran (basicly any anti anti-British statement) it is probably true. :(
 

danmand

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onthebottom

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If the US hadn't invaded Iraq it might be possible to do something about this, but since GWB cried wolf I am guessing now it's time for the wolf to enjoy a nice meal.
Think of it as a forward deployment of armor.....

OTB
 

onthebottom

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onthebottom

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When The Guardian says something unkind about a Communist Regime or any anti-Western regime such as Iran (basicly any anti anti-British statement) it is probably true.
A key part of the vast right-wing conspiracy :rolleyes:

You can almost hear the Israeli jets fueling..... time for a "will Obama bomb Iran" poll I guess.....

OTB
 

Aardvark154

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How long can it be before we will have Colin Powell making a powerpoint presentation about Iran's WMDs.
Don't worry Danmand that brilliant flash in the eastern sky and the fact nothing that you own that isn't EMP protected doesn't work must surely be due to just a massive simultaneous failure of the entire power grid and all the back-up generators.

Absolutely no reason at all to express the remotest concern about a group of eschatological nut jobs who every day are closer to having nuclear weapons.
 

WoodPeckr

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No Change here

Time for our paranoid righties to stock up on Depends and Tin Foil Hats....:rolleyes:
 

onthebottom

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Don't worry Danmand that brilliant flash in the eastern sky and the fact nothing that you own that isn't EMP protected doesn't work must surely be due to just a massive simultaneous failure of the entire power grid and all the back-up generators.

Absolutely no reason at all to express the remotest concern about a group of eschatological nut jobs who every day are closer to having nuclear weapons.
I'm guessing it will happen in Europe, they know the Israelis will fight back, they've seen what we'll do but the Euro-weenies.... they'll start talking....

OTB
 

danmand

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Don't worry Danmand that brilliant flash in the eastern sky and the fact nothing that you own that isn't EMP protected doesn't work must surely be due to just a massive simultaneous failure of the entire power grid and all the back-up generators.

Absolutely no reason at all to express the remotest concern about a group of eschatological nut jobs who every day are closer to having nuclear weapons.
You wouldn't want the smoking gun to be a mushroom cloud.
 

landscaper

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this is worring on a new level. the prospect of a dirty conventional bomb was always there and Fedex delivers anywhere. This is a step almost guarenteed to start up the Isrealis . They can not afford the slightest chance of a nuclear weapon getting near them
 

WoodPeckr

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So the big question is: What is the community organizer in chief going to do about it?
Now you Con-artists want him the be World Policeman???
That's a pretty big FLIP-FLOP, eh skippy?...:rolleyes:
 

Aardvark154

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You wouldn't want the smoking gun to be a mushroom cloud.
No, I don't believe any of us can wait until the smoking gun is a mushroon cloud.

The gun is already smoking. Besides the topic of this tread, the Iranians were offered a good compromise if they really were only interested in civil uses of nuclear materials, you will recall that they flatly rejected that offer of Russian and European reprocessing of their fuel rods last week.
 

danmand

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No, I don't believe any of us can wait until the smoking gun is a mushroon cloud.

The gun is already smoking. Besides the topic of this tread, the Iranians were offered a good compromise if they really were only interested in civil uses of nuclear materials, you will recall that they flatly rejected that offer of Russian and European reprocessing of their fuel rods last week.
Countries that have exploded nuclear devices:

USA
Russia
China
UK
France
Israel
India
Pakistan
South Africa
North Korea
 

Aardvark154

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Countries that have exploded nuclear devices:

USA
Russia
China
UK
France
Israel
India
Pakistan
South Africa
North Korea
With the exception of North Korea, do you honestly believe any of those have as unstable a leadership as does Iran?

Have any of them consistently said that one of their neighbors has no right to exist?


By the way is South Africa still a nuclear power if it ever was?
 
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