AP/ May 31, 2012, 12:13 PM

Satellite pics said to show Iran nuclear site cleanup

This May 25, 2012, left, and April 9, 2012, combination photo provided by the Institute for Science and International Security, ISIS shows evidence of extensive earth dumping in the pond to the north of a high explosive test site and signs of fresh traffic on the road leading to the pond.

This May 25, 2012, left, and April 9, 2012, combination photo provided by the Institute for Science and International Security, ISIS shows evidence of extensive earth dumping in the pond to the north of a high explosive test site and signs of fresh traffic on the road leading to the pond. / AP Photo/ISIS, handout

(AP) A U.S. nonproliferation think tank on Thursday published commercial satellite images of an Iranian military site linked to suspected secret work on nuclear arms, saying they show that two buildings there were demolished as well as other activities that strengthen U.N. suspicions of a cleanup.

The Washington-based Institute for Science and International Security provides consultancy services for U.S. government agencies focused on nonproliferation and is considered an objective source of information on Iran's nuclear program.

A senior diplomat who saw the photos displayed on the think tank's website and who is accredited to the International Atomic Energy Agency told The Associated Press they showed apparent cleanup work similar to that depicted on spy satellite photos supplied to the IAEA by member nations closely tracking Iran's nuclear activities.

He demanded anonymity because his information was confidential.

The postings of the photos come a day after the IAEA showed what the senior diplomat said were similar images made available separately to the agency's 35-member nation board. Asked about the allegations afterward, Ali Asghar Soltanieh, Iran's chief IAEA delegate, dismissed them as "baseless."

The IAEA, the U.N. nuclear watchdog, named the Parchin military installation late last year as the site of suspected tests of high explosives designed to set off a nuclear charge. Since then it has asked repeatedly for access, only to be rebuffed by Iran.

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Parchin is only one link in what the IAEA says is a chain of evidence suggesting Tehran conducted extensive nuclear weapons research and development - something the Islamic Republic strenuously denies. But visiting Parchin became a top priority after satellite images revealed the start of apparent cleanup work there shortly after the IAEA's initial access request.

The IAEA expressed its latest concerns last week. Its Iran report noted that - while satellite photos had over past years shown "virtually no activity" at the site - "the buildings of interest to the agency are now subject to extensive activities that could hamper the agency's ability to undertake effective verification."

ISIS said on its website that the commercial satellite imagery from May 25 "shows that two small buildings at the same site as the suspected testing chamber have been completely razed."

"There are visible tracks made by heavy machinery used in the demolition process," it said. "Heavy machinery tracks and extensive evidence of earth displacement is also visible throughout the interior as well as the exterior of the site's perimeter."

The ISIS website also displayed a commercial satellite image taken April 9 which seems to show the two buildings in question still standing.

Diplomats at the closed IAEA meeting Wednesday who saw images that agency had in its possession said that one photo that was taken earlier this month also showed several buildings razed and extensive earth works around the site.

The senior diplomat told The Associated Press that - despite months of apparent "sanitization" - the building sheltering a metal pressure chamber where the explosions testing allegedly took place was still standing on the latest satellite images. But he said streams of what appear to be water trickling from inside indicate the chamber was being cleaned as well.

Hopes that Iran would end more than four years of stonewalling the IAEA's probe into its suspected secret weapons work at Parchin and elsewhere grew recently when agency chief Yukiya Amano returned from a trip to Tehran saying a tentative deal that will relaunch the investigation had been reached.

The senior diplomat said, however, that Iran has made no effort since that trip to resolve unspecified outstanding differences blocking final agreement on such a deal - even though Amano cited chief Iranian nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili as saying they would be solved.

Ruediger Luedeking, the chief German delegate to the IAEA, urged Iran to honor the commitment Amano said was made.

"We hope that Iran concludes an agreement with the IAEA without delay," he told the AP. "Director General Amano was assured during his latest visit to Tehran that nothing stands in the way of this."

Alleged secret nuclear weapons research and development is only one of the international community's worries about Iran.

Separate from IAEA efforts on that issue, six world powers - the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany - are attempting to persuade Tehran to stop enriching uranium to a level that can be turned into warhead material more quickly than its low-enriched main stockpile. Their next meeting is in Moscow starting June 17.

Iran has shrugged off U.N. and other international sanctions, insisting it is enriching to low levels only to make nuclear fuel and to higher concentrations to power a research reactor and for scientific purposes. But because all enriched uranium can be further processed to weapons-grade material, Iran's nuclear secrecy - and its decision last year to start higher-level enrichment at an underground bunker it says is safe from attack - has fed worries that it could quickly "break out" a weapons program.

Noting that Iran had already razed its Lavisan-Shian site under IAEA investigation eight years ago before allowing agency experts to visit it in northeastern Tehran, ISIS urged the Islamic Republic to give agency experts immediate access "and explain the significance of these apparent cleanup activities."

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
13 Comments Add a Comment
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JonRyberg says:
Oh my god! They have dirt roads.. and they use them. That's a definite sign of developing a nuclear bomb. Do these people even really listen to themselves as they create this "evidence" in their own minds?
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slownewsday_6000 says:
Israel is in no way our ally.

Why are they SO afraid to let the IAEA inspectors in?

what are they hiding???
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formerlyluvnut says:
It's a waste of technology anyway 'cause we ain't going to do anything about it so why do we bother taking pic's???
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John782011 replies:
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Empire What would you do?
slownewsday_6000 replies:
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Empire is a fiscal LIB who believes we should nation build at any expense. He has no problem with us having multiple bases in 127 countries, no problem with paying for Israel's universal healthcare, etc.

If he were a conservative, he'd be for keeping out of the Israel/Iran conflict.
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oldman67 says:
I have to say for yow posters who love war, you fall right in line with most Americans. www.ADDICTEDTOWAR.COM/Why the U.S. Can't Kick Militarism Read the free illustrated book.
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notMormonOrABishop says:
Apparently, the Ron Paul adoring, self-loathing isolationistas* who hate-monger against Israel, the Israeli government, and Jews are in the process of being shown-up for the anti-American trolls that they are. For example:
- by mormoncult May 22, 2012 8:09 PM EDT
"Perhaps now that the Iranians have agreed to international
inspection of their nukes, and signed the nuclear non proliferation
treaty, North Korea, Israel, and Pakistan, will follow their
leadership and do the same."

Reuters covered the same news from this vantage point ..
http://uk.reuters.com/article/2012/05/31/uk-nuclear-iran-parchin-idUKBRE84U0BM20120531
Debka covered the related story on Russia's gambit supporting their customer-states Iran and Syria against the West ...
http://www.debka.com/article/22043/Exclusive-Obama-weighs-action-to-prevent-Al-Qaeda-grabbing-Syrian-WMD-
While the Chinese collaborate, but don't actively partiocipate in the Middle East theatre (yet?)

* For clarity thuggish troll-like behavior under variants of these login credentials: slownewsday, fedup12, retm-w, and the misrepresenting fraudster currently posting as 'nocults', but also recently as 'AnyonebutRomney', 'RomneytheMexican',
'mormonbishop' is 'mormoncult', 'factsasrebuttal', 'factual_rebuttal', 'savetheninetyninepercent', 'willard_romney', 'BishopRomney', 'GoogleMormonism'

Hatred by any other name -- troll, Supreme Leader, Salifist -- remains just as evil as when Bush '43 lead our government.

Let's give our National Security Secretary all the public's support in ensuring that good does prevail. Perhaps if she were President, the world would not have arrived at such perilous circumstances.
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slownewsday_6000 replies:
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Nice lie. None of us you mentioned has ever spoken against Jews.

Being against the criminal government of Israel isn't anti-Jewish, by far. Otherwise, explain the US/Jewish lobbying group "J Street" and its dislike of Israel's rogue actions.

I'll wait.
notMormonOrABishop replies:
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No lies or exaggeration. Your comments are only found on stories about Israel or Middle East issues there you contort the news item so to inject your comments related to Israel. All your comments related to Israel are acerbic, if not caustic, and often predicated on an uninformed perspective of the facts at play.

Thought promoted to civilian, I accept you aren't practised at critical thinking or autonomous leadership. So if you must dutifully follow, at least salute POTUS instead of some non-com you happen to bump into online.

Oh, and if you find that insufficient, prove me wrong ... Go ahead .. I am waiting...
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venusvegasvada says:
Good, 2 less buildings for us to have to bomb in the near future.
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JoseGonzalezDoritos replies:
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Not the US.
Israel.
They are fully capable of taking care of it themselves.
slownewsday_6000 replies:
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Jose - they, and the rest of the region, are too cheap to do so.

Why? They know they can count on the US to waste our money and lives, instead.
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JoseGonzalezDoritos says:
So how much more evidence does Israel need?

The delay of their impending attack on Iran's nuclear sites is only decreasing their level of security.

Come on Israel, get on it!
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