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Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, speaks with to the media during a pressconference in Tehran, Iran, Tuesday. Ahmadinejad on Tuesday said Iran would soon celebrate completion of its controversial nuclear fuel program.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, speaks with to the media during a pressconference in Tehran, Iran, Tuesday. Ahmadinejad on Tuesday said Iran would soon celebrate completion of its controversial nuclear fuel program.
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Vienna – International Atomic Energy Agency experts have found unexplained plutonium and highly enriched uranium traces in a nuclear waste facility in Iran and have asked Tehran for details, a report from the U.N. watchdog said Tuesday.

The report, prepared for next week’s meeting of the 35-nation IAEA, also faulted Tehran for not cooperating with the agency’s attempts to investigate suspicious aspects of Iran’s nuclear program that have led to fears it might be interested in developing nuclear arms.

And it said it could not confirm Iranian claims that its nuclear activities were exclusively nonmilitary unless Tehran increased its openness.

“The agency will remain unable to make further progress in its efforts to verify the absence of undeclared nuclear material and activities in Iran” without additional cooperation from Tehran, said the report, by IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei.

As expected, the four-page report made available to The Associated Press confirmed that Iran continues uranium enrichment experiments in defiance of the U.N. Security Council.

Both highly enriched uranium and plutonium can be used to make the fissile core of nuclear warheads, and Iran is under intense international pressure to freeze activities that can produce such substances.

But Tehran has shrugged off both Security Council demands that it stop developing its enrichment programs and urgings that it cease construction of a heavy water research reactor that produces plutonium waste. It insists it wants enrichment only to generate nuclear power and says it needs the Arak research reactor to produce isotopes for medical research and cancer treatment.

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