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Iran sets up secret team to infiltrate UN nuclear watchdog, say officials |
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Monday, 30 January 2006 |
The Daily Telegraph
By Con Coughlin, Defence and Security Editor
Iran has formed a top secret team of nuclear specialists to infiltrate the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna, the UN-sponsored body that monitors its nuclear programme, The Daily Telegraph has been told.
Its target is the IAEA's safeguards division and its aim is to obtain information on the work of IAEA inspectors so that Iran can conceal the more sensitive areas of its nuclear research, according to information recently received by western intelligence.
Teheran insists that the sole purpose of the controversial programme is
to develop alternative energy sources. But many western governments,
including Britain and the United States, believe it is secretly
developing a nuclear arsenal.
The operation to target the IAEA is being run by Hosein Afarideh, the former head of the Iranian parliament's energy committee.
Mr Afarideh, reported to have close links with Iran's ministry of
intelligence, is in regular contact with a team of Iranian nuclear
engineers seconded to work at the IAEA's Vienna headquarters.
According to western intelligence reports, Mr Afarideh heads a
three-man team at the headquarters of the Atomic Energy Organisation of
Iran in Teheran, to prevent more embarrassing disclosures about its
nuclear facilities.
In the past the Iranians have managed to conceal key facilities from
IAEA inspectors, including the Natanz uranium enrichment plant, 100
miles north of Isfahan. They were reluctantly forced to admit the
existence of Natanz and other top secret facilities three years ago
after Iranian exile groups provided details of their operations.
As a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, Iran is
entitled to full access to the IAEA for help with the development of
its nuclear programme, so long as it is purely for peaceful purposes.
But western intelligence officials believe that the Iranians are now
taking advantage of their access to the IAEA to spy on its inspection
procedures so that they can conceal sensitive areas of their nuclear
operations from the outside world.
"The Iranians are getting increasingly concerned about the
effectiveness of the IAEA's inspections," a senior western intelligence
official told The Daily Telegraph.
"For this reason they are deliberately targeting the IAEA so that they
can be better prepared when the inspectors visit their facilities."
An IAEA spokesman refused to comment on the intelligence reports.
However, an official who confirmed that a number of Iranian nuclear
engineers were working at the IAEA's headquarters said the agency had
set up stringent safeguards to ensure that no country had access to the
inspection teams investigating its nuclear facilities.
"We have a firewall system that prevents any member state finding out
how the inspection teams working on that country operate," said the
official.
Despite this close supervision, Iranian scientists working at the IAEA
in Vienna travel frequently to Teheran, where they meet Atomic Energy
Organisation of Iran officials including Mr Afarideh. Mr Afarideh is
also in close contact with Mohsein Fakhrizadeh, head of the
organisation's physical research centre.
IAEA inspectors have made repeated requests to interview Mr Fakhrizadeh
about key aspects of Iran's nuclear programme. But the Iranian
government has refused to grant them access to him.
IAEA experts predict that Iran will be able to produce weapons-grade
uranium within three years if the processing plants operate without
international supervision. |