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BASIC Comment

Plotting to mine uranium in Africa?

23 August 2006

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The Sunday Times' report on 'Iran's plot to mine uranium in Africa' last week plays upon people’s understandable fears over Iran’s nuclear development. The central claim, that Iran is importing large consignments of 'bomb-making' uranium from the Lubumbashi mines in the Congo, is reminiscent of discredited reports that Saddam sought to buy uranium from Niger.

'Bomb-making uranium' does not come neatly packaged out of mines. The Lubumbashi mine, if it were producing at all, would provide raw uranium ore. This would have to be converted and enriched before it could be used for bombs. To date, Iran is some way off from being able to do this adequately for weapons purposes. Not only this, but the mine has not been active since 1961. Any illicit mining would involve enormous quantities of extracted material, and a milling process nearby involving heavy plant and machinery, and 'tailings' (waste products from the milling process) that would be impossible to hide either from the ground or from satellite.

Iran has around 12,000 tons of its own deposits of natural uranium (of which well over 1,000 tons is easily recoverable). It makes no sense to smuggle for bomb purposes large quantities of processed yellowcake across numerous borders and risk detection in the age of the Proliferation Security Initiative when it could secretly open its own mine within Iran or divert material from existing mines. If Iran were to import natural uranium it would be to supply a uranium-intensive nuclear power programme for the longer term, as its domestic supplies would last around 12 years. As the US State Department repeatedly points out, it would take Iran much more uranium to fuel its planned seven power stations than it would to build a modest nuclear arsenal.

Stories such as this from the Sunday Times appear more intended to stoke up support for muscular action in an already tense stand-off than to shed light on the complex situation.

Iran's plot to mine uranium in Africa

By Jon Swain, David Leppard and Brian Johnson-Thomas

The Sunday Times, 6 August 2006

IRAN is seeking to import large consignments of bomb-making uranium from the African mining area that produced the Hiroshima bomb, an investigation has revealed.

A United Nations report, dated July 18, said there was “no doubt” that a huge shipment of smuggled uranium 238, uncovered by customs officials in Tanzania, was transported from the Lubumbashi mines in the Congo.

Tanzanian customs officials told The Sunday Times it was destined for the Iranian port of Bandar Abbas, and was stopped on October 22 last year during a routine check.

The disclosure will heighten western fears about the extent of Iran’s presumed nuclear weapons programme and the strategic implications of Iran’s continuing support for Hezbollah during the war with Israel.

It has also emerged that terror cells backed by Iran may be prepared to mount attacks against nuclear power plants in Britain. Intelligence circulating in Whitehall suggests that sleeper cells linked to Tehran have been conducting reconnaissance at some nuclear sites in preparation for a possible attack.

The parliamentary intelligence and security committee has reported that Iran represented one of the three biggest security threats to Britain. The UN security council has given Iran until the end of this month to halt its uranium enrichment activities. The UN has threatened sanctions if Tehran fails to do so.

A senior Tanzanian customs official said the illicit uranium shipment was found hidden in a consignment of coltan, a rare mineral used to make chips in mobile telephones. The shipment was destined for smelting in the former Soviet republic of Kazakhstan, delivered via Bandar Abbas, Iran’s biggest port.

“There were several containers due to be shipped and they were all routinely scanned with a Geiger counter,” the official said.

“This one was very radioactive. When we opened the container it was full of drums of coltan. Each drum contains about 50kg of ore. When the first and second rows were removed,the ones after that were found to be drums of uranium.”

In a nuclear reactor, uranium 238 can be used to breed plutonium used in nuclear weapons.

The customs officer, who spoke to The Sunday Times on condition he was not named, added: “The container was put in a secure part of the port and it was later taken away, by the Americans, I think, or at least with their help. We have all been told not to talk to anyone about this.”

The report by the UN investigation team was submitted to the chairman of the UN sanctions committee, Oswaldo de Rivero, at the end of July and will be considered soon by the security council.

It states that Tanzania provided “limited data” on three other shipments of radioactive materials seized in Dar es Salaam over the past 10 years.

The experts said: “In reference to the last shipment from October 2005, the Tanzanian government left no doubt that the uranium was transported from Lubumbashi by road through Zambia to the united republic of Tanzania.”

Lubumbashi is the capital of mineral-rich Katanga province, home of the Shinkolobwe uranium mine that produced material for the two atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945.

The mine has officially been closed since 1961, before the country’s independence from Belgium, but the UN investigators have told the security council that they found evidence of illegal mining still going on at the site.

In 1999 there were reports that the Congolese authorities had tried to re-open the mine with the help of North Korea. In recent years miners are said to have broken open the lids and extracted ore from the shafts, while police and local authorities turned a blind eye.

In June a parliamentary committee warned that Britain could be attacked by Iranian terrorists if tensions increased.

A source with access to current MI5 assessments said: “There is great concern about Iranian sleeper cells inside this country. The intelligence services are taking this threat very seriously.”

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