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WASHINGTON — As #Iran
and six world powers meet this week in Vienna to begin drafting
language to resolve their nuclear standoff, negotiators say they are
finally confronting a crucial sticking point to a permanent agreement —
the size and shape of the nuclear fuel production capability that Iran
will be permitted to retain.
It
is a subject that, at least in public, the #Obama administration steps
around, acutely aware that Israel and members of Congress who are highly
suspicious of the negotiations will say that Iran must be kept years
from being able to develop a weapon, and that opponents of the deal in
Tehran will argue that no restraints at all should be imposed.
Both
the Iranians and the Western powers have said their talks so far have
been productive, with little of the drama, the ultimatums and the
entrenche
d positions that have marked previous efforts. But until now,
there has been no formal discussion of how much #nuclear infrastructure
the United States and its allies would demand that Iran dismantle in
return for the gradual easing of sanctions. “This is the sticker-shock
conversation, and we haven’t had it yet,” one senior administration
official said.
In a visit to Israel last week, the national security adviser, Susan E. Rice,
and the chief American negotiator, Wendy Sherman, made clear that the
Iranians would almost certainly retain some enrichment capability,
though American officials said they never discussed specific numbers.
Israeli officials say they expect the figure to be 2,000 to 5,000
centrifuges. American officials say their goal is to keep Iran more than
a year away from the ability to produce fuel usable in a single nuclear
weapon, but they become vague about how much beyond one year. It would
take even longer to fabricate that into a deliverable weapon.
In
a recent speech, President Hassan Rouhani of Iran was careful to
describe himself as open to more inspections, but not to dismantling the
country’s nuclear infrastructure. “We have nothing to put on the table
and offer to them but transparency,” he told his country’s Atomic Energy
Organization, according to accounts from Iranian news organizations.
“That’s it. Our nuclear technology is not up for negotiation.”
The
Iranians are talking about expanding their current cache, to build
upward of 50,000 centrifuges, the tall, silvery machines that spin at
supersonic speeds, enriching uranium at every turn. Iran currently has
19,000 installed, including about 8,000 that are not yet running. If
Iran ever reached its goal — which is highly unlikely in the next few
years, especially with a new generation of centrifuges that produce fuel
much more quickly — American experts say Iran would be able to produce
weapons-grade material in weeks.
“An
enrichment capacity that large — indeed, an enrichment capacity greater
than a few thousand first-generation centrifuges — would give Iran an
unacceptably rapid breakout capability,” Robert Einhorn, who until last
year was a key member of the Iran negotiating team for the State
Department, wrote in The National Interest last week. If that was more than just a negotiating position, he wrote, “it is a showstopper, and Iran must know that.”
“Breakout
capability” — a phrase that means the ability to quickly produce a bomb
— depends on many factors beyond the number of centrifuges left
spinning in Iran. The size of Iran’s inventory of nuclear fuel, the
frequency and breadth of nuclear inspections, and the ability to detect
secret facilities (two have been discovered in the past decade) factor
into the equation.
As
Ms. Rice and Ms. Sherman have told American lawmakers and outside
experts, the key is to leave Iran with a face-saving nuclear
infrastructure that would allow its clerics and the nation’s
Revolutionary Guards commanders the ability to argue that they have not
given up the right to produce nuclear fuel, but with a small enough
capability that the White House can overcome Congressional objections.
Allies
of the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, still angry that the
Obama administration kept them in the dark about the secret
negotiations with Iran that led to the current round of talks, publicly
set an enormously high bar that they knew American negotiators could not
clear. “There are two models here: Libya and North Korea,” said Yuval
Steinitz, Israel’s intelligence minister, in an interview on Monday. “In
Libya all the elements of the nuclear program
were handed over to the Americans and inspectors” and left the country,
he said. “In North Korea equipment was dismantled, then built again,”
he said, “and then came their nuclear tests.”
But
Mr. Steinitz acknowledged that the United States and its allies had
made what he termed “reasonable progress” in getting the Iranians to
agree, at least in principle, to modifying a heavy-water reactor near
the town of Arak that could be used to produce weapons-grade plutonium,
another path to a bomb. The head of Iran’s atomic organization, Ali
Akhbar Salehi, has said his agency is willing to modify plans for Arak
to reduce output significantly, indicating some negotiating space. But
there has been almost no progress on Iran’s missile capability; on
Monday, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, called Western
demands for limits on missiles “stupid and idiotic.”
Even
as the negotiators debate the size and scope of the Iranian nuclear
program, a new study of Iran’s emerging use of cyberweapons concludes
that the country is beginning to follow China’s model of using computer
malware to conduct espionage against American defense contractors and
the government.
But
the attacks from “patriotic hackers” whose exact links to the Iranian
government and its Revolutionary Guards remain murky, appeared to slow
for a time at the end of 2013, as the negotiations with the United
States and Europe began to gain some traction, according to the study by
FireEye, a Silicon Valley security firm. The findings were first
reported by Reuters, and a copy of the study was obtained by The New
York Times.
The
study focuses on what Iranian hackers call the Ajax Security Team,
which it says is “conducting multiple cyberespionage operations against
companies in the defense industrial base within the United States” and
is targeting Iranians trying to evade censorship at home.
Iranian
officials have made clear that they view the cyber and nuclear issues
as closely related, especially after Iran suffered a debilitating
attack, known popularly as Stuxnet or by its code name, Olympic Games,
which was designed by the United States and Israel.
The
cyberattacks led Iran to announce it was assembling a “cyber corps.”
While their techniques do not compare to those of the Chinese or the
Russians, Iranian hackers were determined to have been behind a 2012
attack on Saudi Aramco, the oil producer. Iran was also believed to have
been responsible for an attack on the Navy Marine Corps Intranet that
did little damage, but was considered a bold challenge.
Source: The New York Times
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