Sunday, January 27, 2008

Iran Increases Nuclear Component Output


Oh boy! The Iranians are now claiming that they have turned out more than 300 tons of gas suitable for uranium enrichment! That gas, when enriched leads to the necessary element in nuclear energy production but...if that gas is enriched even further, then they have the product necessary for nuclear WEAPONS.
So, with all of that being said and announced, what is the world's new tough line agains the Iranians?


The Security Council is considering a new draft resolution that calls for additional sanctions against Iran, including bans on travel.

Wow! The mighty United Nations Security Council is going to ban some world wide travel for some diplomats if the Iranians don't stop this nuclear aggression. The horror! I'm sure we will see the Iranians destroy their entire nuclear facility by Monday so they can ensure that the ambassador to Lumxembourg can return by mid-week.
As I have said time and time again, when it's too late folks, it's too late.

Here is the story.


Iran increases nuclear activity
Jan 27 07:38 AM US/Eastern

An Iranian official said that the Islamic republic has increased its production to more than 300 tons of a gas used for uranium enrichment, a semi-official news agency reported.The announcement comes as the UN Security Council is deciding whether to impose new economic sanctions against Iran for refusing to roll back its nuclear activities."The Isfahan uranium conversion facility is active, and it has produced more than 300 tons of UF6," otherwise known as uranium hexaflouride gas, the Fars news agency quoted Javad Vaidi, deputy of Iran's Supreme National Security Council, as saying in meeting to members of the Revolutionary Guards.The Fars news agency is considered close to the elite branch of Iran's military.The central Iranian cities of Isfahan and Natanz house the heart of the Iran's nuclear programme.In Isfahan, a conversion facility reprocesses raw uranium, known as yellowcake, into uranium hexaflouride gas. The gas is then taken to Natanz and fed into the centrifuges for enrichment.Centrifuges spin uranium gas into enriched material, which at low levels is used to produce nuclear fuel to generate electricity. But further enrichment makes it suitable for use in building nuclear weapons.A report by UN nuclear watchdog in November confirmed that Iran had stockpiled nearly 270 metric tons of the precursor gas used in enrichment.The UN Security Council has been trying to pressure Iran to freeze uranium enrichment. But Iran has repeatedly refused, and officials from the International Atomic Energy Agency have privately said Tehran is expanding the programme.
The Security Council is considering a new draft resolution that calls for additional sanctions against Iran, including bans on travel. Two sets of sanctions have already been imposed on Iran for refusing to halt enrichment.

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