Iran builds at underground nuclear facility amid US tensions
Iran has begun construction on a site at its
underground nuclear facility at Fordo amid tensions with the U.S. over its
atomic program, satellite photos obtained Friday by The Associated Press show.
Iran has not publicly acknowledged any new
construction at Fordo, whose discovery by the West in 2009 came in an earlier
round of brinkmanship before world powers struck the 2015 nuclear deal with
Tehran.
While the purpose of the building remains unclear,
any work at Fordo likely will trigger new concern in the waning days of the
Trump administration before the inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden.
Already, Iran is building at its Natanz nuclear facility after a mysterious explosion
in July there that Tehran described as a sabotage attack.
“Any changes at this site will be carefully watched
as a sign of where Iran’s nuclear program is headed,” said Jeffrey Lewis, an
expert at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies at the
Middlebury Institute of International Studies who studies Iran.
Iran’s mission to the United Nations did not
immediately respond to a request for comment. The International Atomic Energy
Agency, whose inspectors are in Iran as part of the nuclear deal, declined to
comment. The IAEA as of yet has not publicly disclosed if Iran informed it of
any construction at Fordo.
Construction on the Fordo site began in late
September. Satellite images obtained from Maxar Technologies by the AP show the
construction taking place at a northwest corner of the site, near the holy
Shiite city of Qom some 90 kilometers (55 miles) southwest of Tehran.
A Dec. 11 satellite photo shows what appears to be a
dug foundation for a building with dozens of pillars. Such pillars can be used
in construction to support buildings in earthquake zones.
The construction site sits northwest of Fordo’s
underground facility, built deep inside a mountain to protect it from potential
airstrikes. The site is near other support and research-and-development
buildings at Fordo.
Among those buildings is Iran’s National Vacuum
Technology Center. Vacuum technology is a crucial component of Iran’s
uranium-gas centrifuges, which enrich uranium.
A Twitter account called Observer IL earlier this
week published an image of Fordo showing the construction, citing it as coming
from South Korea’s Korea Aerospace Research Institute.
The AP later reached the Twitter user, who
identified himself as a retired Israeli Defense Forces soldier with a civil
engineering background. He asked that his name not be published over previous
threats he received online. The Korea Aerospace Research Institute acknowledged
taking the satellite photo.
Trump in 2018 unilaterally withdrew the U.S. from
Iran’s nuclear deal, in which Tehran had agreed to limit its uranium enrichment
in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions. Trump cited Iran’s ballistic
missile program, its regional policies and other issues in withdrawing from the
accord, though the deal focused entirely on Tehran’s atomic program.
When the U.S. ramped up sanctions, Iran gradually
and publicly abandoned the deal’s limits as a series of escalating incidents
pushed the two countries to the brink of war at the beginning of the year.
Tensions still remain high.
Under the 2015 nuclear deal, Iran agreed to stop enriching
uranium at Fordo and instead make it “a nuclear, physics and technology
center.”
“This location was a major sticking point in
negotiations leading to the Iran nuclear deal,” Lewis said. “The U.S. insisted
Iran close it while Iran’s supreme leader said keeping it was a red line.”
Since the deal’s collapse, Iran has resumed
enrichment there.
Shielded by the mountains, the facility also is
ringed by anti-aircraft guns and other fortifications. It is about the size of
a football field, large enough to house 3,000 centrifuges, but small and
hardened enough to lead U.S. officials to suspect it had a military purpose
when they exposed the site publicly in 2009.
As of now, Iran is enriching uranium up to 4.5%, in
violation of the accord’s limit of 3.67%. Iran’s parliament has passed a bill
that requires Tehran to enrich up to 20%, a short technical step away from
weapons-grade levels of 90%. The bill also would throw out IAEA inspectors.
Experts say Iran now has enough low-enriched uranium
stockpiled for at least two nuclear weapons, if it chose to pursue them. Iran
long has maintained its nuclear program is peaceful.
While Iranian President Hassan Rouhani opposed the
bill, the country’s Guardian Council later tweaked and approved it. The bill
seeks to pressure European nations to provide relief from crippling U.S.
sanctions.
Meanwhile, an Iranian scientist who created its
military nuclear program two decades ago recently was killed in a shooting
outside of Tehran. Iran has blamed Israel, which has long been suspected of
killing Iranian nuclear scientists over the last decade, for the attack. Israel
has not commented on the attack.