Iran testing 'advanced centrifuges'

Iran is testing an advanced centrifuge at its Natanz nuclear complex, diplomats said this evening, a move that could lead to …

Iran is testing an advanced centrifuge at its Natanz nuclear complex, diplomats said this evening, a move that could lead to Tehran enriching uranium much faster and gaining ability to build atom bombs.

Iran says it wants nuclear energy only for electricity so it can export more oil. But it is under sanctions for hiding the program until 2003, preventing UN inspectors since then from verifying it is wholly peaceful and refusing to suspend it.

Tehran's quest to produce usable amounts of nuclear fuel has been hampered by its use so far of a 1970s vintage of centrifuge, the "P-1", prone to breakdown. Iran had 3,000 P-1s operating by November, creating in theory a basis for industrial scale enrichment, but was running them only at low capacity.

But diplomats tracking Iran's dossier said it had started mechanical tests, without nuclear material inside, of a more efficient model in the pilot wing of the vast Natanz plant.

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"The Iranians have begun to run in the advanced model. It's not yet known what stage the testing has reached or exactly how many there are, although it appears to be several dozen," said a Western diplomat with access to intelligence.

A senior diplomat familiar with the International Atomic Energy Agency's file on Iran confirmed it recently began testing centrifuges based on a "P-2" design, used more recently in the West and able to enrich uranium 2-3 times as fast as the P-1.

He declined to elaborate, saying details would come in a report IAEA Director Mohamed ElBaradei will deliver to the Vienna-based agency's 35-nation Board of Governors and the UN Security Council later this month.

It was not known how successful the "dry runs" with the new machines had been or when they might be test-fed with uranium gas for enrichment. Iran had no immediate comment.