Suzy V (13
Feb 2012)
"Countdown! Iran's
finger on nuclear trigger"
Countdown!
Iran's finger on nuclear trigger
2 warheads, payloads could be weaponized in weeks
Published: 10 hours ago
By Reza Khalili
WASHINGTON – Iranian nuclear
experts have completed the component for a nuclear bomb
trigger, overcoming a major obstacle in obtaining the
bomb, according to sources within Iran.
As reported last May, the Iranian nuclear and military
industries, under the order of Iran’s supreme leader,
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, were to weaponize at least two
warheads with a nuclear payload no later than next month.
Sources within the Revolutionary Guards reveal that the work
on the trigger is taking place covertly under the control of
the Guards in the cities of Darkhovin and Isfahan.
Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, the main
brain behind the Iranian nuclear bomb program, is guiding
the project. Fakhrizadeh reportedly reports directly to
Khamenei and is under tight security because of the
assassination of other Iranian nuclear scientists.
The Islamic regime has rejected several requests by the
International Atomic Energy Agency to interview him. The
U.N. nuclear watchdog believes Fakhrizadeh was responsible for the project “111,”
which would convert highly enriched uranium into metal for
a nuclear warhead and its reentry design.
The IAEA last November indicated that Iran had experimented
with firing multiple detonators with a high level of
simultaneity. The report also indicated that Iran as early
as 2003 began a large-scale experiment to initiate a
high-explosive charge in the form of a hemispherical shell.
This indicates work on a nuclear bomb.
According to Sepahonline, which is close to the
Revolutionary Guards, Iranian nuclear bomb progress is
overseen by the supreme leader’s military adviser, Rahim
Safavi, a former chief commander of the Guards, and a
cleric, Mohsen Ghomi, who has communicated the will of the
supreme leader for a speedy completion of the project. These
activities are taking place at several secret locations
unknown to the IAEA. One location reportedly is in the city
of Mobarake, south west of Isfahan.
Peter Vincent Pry, executive director of the newly
established Task Force on National and Homeland Security, a
congressional advisory board, concludes from IAEA
intelligence that Iran’s nuclear weapons program is very
advanced.
”Iran has already developed
hemispherical explosive lenses and highly precise
detonators,” Pry states, “a clear indicator Iran is
working on, or has already built, an implosion-type
nuclear weapon. The United States used an implosion atomic
bomb during World War II to destroy Nagasaki.”
Pry notes that reports that
Iran is working on an atomic trigger – a device that helps
initiate the fission reaction that results in a nuclear
explosion – indicates that Iran’s nuclear weaponization is
advanced, since this is one of the last steps toward
building an atomic warhead. Centrifuge technology has
enabled Pakistan, North Korea and now Iran to enrich
uranium to weapons grade without requiring enormous, and
impossible to disguise, gaseous diffusion plants, thus
enabling those countries to build nuclear weapons
clandestinely.
”The U.S. Manhattan Project produced two atomic bombs of
radically different designs in just three years,” Pry says,
“yet Iran has supposedly been struggling to build a nuclear
weapon for two decades. Some of us believe Iran may already
have nuclear weapons but has concealed this from the West in
order to avoid a preemptive strike until such time as Iran’s
nuclear status will become irreversible, as with North
Korea.”
Pry warns that Iran does not have to develop an ICBM in
order to pose a nuclear threat to the United States. ”Iran
has already demonstrated the capability to launch a missile
capable of delivering a nuclear weapon from a freighter at
sea.”
Iran currently has enough enriched uranium for six nuclear
bombs and is enriching uranium to the 20 percent level
unabated, despite four sets of U.N. sanctions. Enriching to
the 20 percent level is nine-tenths of the way to
weaponization. It takes only
several weeks to further enrich the 20 percent stock into
weapons-grade material over the 90 percent level.
In another major development parallel to Iran’s nuclear
program, Fars News Agency, which is close to the
Revolutionary Guards, announced that Iran will launch a
one-ton satellite into orbit in the Iranian New Year
(starting March 20).
Defense Minister Brig. Gen. Ahmad Vahidi, who is wanted by
Interpol for the Jewish Community Center bombing in 1994,
stated that Iran is setting up a new base for the launch of
the heavier satellite.
Iran, which launched its first satellite in 2009,
successfully sent another satellite into orbit on Feb. 3.
Though the payload was only 110 pounds, it was sufficient to
deliver a nuclear artillery shell to intercontinental
distances.
The news of a heavier satellite should come as a warning to
the West, as the one-ton payload could very well carry a
nuclear bomb any distance on earth.
Historically, orbiting a satellite is the criterion used for
crediting a nation with ICBM capability.
Last December I revealed that China, in a secret agreement
with the Islamic regime, had sold Iran ICBM technology and
that the North Koreans were working with the Guards in
assembling the missiles, which once complete will have a
range of over 6,000 miles and will have America within its
range.
In an alarming indication that Iran and North Korea are
collaborating on nuclear bombs, radioisotope data from
Russian and Japanese stations close to North Korea suggest
that North Korea likely conducted two nuclear tests in 2010.
At the same time, reports from inside Iran indicated a team
of Iranian nuclear scientists had been sent to North Korea
and that the two governments have agreed on a joint nuclear
test in North Korea with a substantial financial reward to
North Korea.
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in
another defiant speech on the anniversary of the Islamic
Revolution on Saturday, announced that the world will soon
witness another major accomplishment in the Iranian
nuclear program within days. The Iranian president said
his nation will ”never yield” to Western sanctions and
threats of military action from Israel and the United
States.
Negotiation and sanctions will not deter the Islamic regime
in Iran to change its course from obtaining the nuclear
bomb. It is not the economy, it is the ideology.
Reza Kahlili is a pseudonym for a former CIA operative in
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards and the author of the award
winning book, “A Time to Betray.” He is a senior Fellow with
EMPact America and teaches at the U.S. Department of
Defense’s Joint Counterintelligence Training Academy (JCITA)
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