WND/ Reza Kahlili
Responding
to WND, the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic
Energy Agency, refused to deny that Iran’s nuclear facility at Fordow
has been rocked by several explosions.
WND reported exclusively Jan. 24 that its source said explosions had devastated the Fordow facility and that over 200 people, including North Korean technicians and military personnel, were trapped inside the facility, which is deep under a mountain.
In a statement to Reuters, IAEA spokeswoman Gill Tudor implied the U.N. agency had inspected the site after the reported explosions and affirmed Tehran’s insistence that the report was false.
But when asked by WND, Tudor would not confirm or deny the incident.
“The agency does not evaluate matters in Iran other than those
directly relating to its nuclear verification work, so although we’re
aware of these media reports, we are not in a position either to confirm
or deny them,” Tudor said in an email to WND.
“That said,” she continued, “I’m sure you are aware that agency
inspectors regularly visit Iranian nuclear facilities under the IAEA’s
safeguards agreement with that country. (You will find more information
on the IAEA’s safeguards mandate and activities in Iran at
http://www.iaea.org/newscenter/focus/iaeairan/index.shtml.)
“We understand Iran has denied that there has been an incident at
Fordow, and this is consistent with our observations,” Tudor said.
However, in a follow-up inquiry by WND to verify if the IAEA had
inspected the site since the report of the explosions, Tudor refused to
answer.
“I’m very sorry but I can’t go into any further details on ongoing
safeguards work, which is conducted with a high level of
confidentiality,” she replied.
Separately, the Institute for Science and International Security has
obtained a satellite image of the Fordow site dated Jan. 22, one day
after the incident. The photo shows no unusual activity on the surface.
However, WND’s original report indicated the regime did not initially
make an effort to rescue the workers trapped inside until days ago. No
unusual traffic, therefore, would have been visible.
Get the inside story in Reza Kahlili’s “A Time To Betray” and learn how the Islamic regime “bought the bomb” in “Atomic Iran.”
Meanwhile, the Iranian Fars News Agency reports
the Revolutionary Guards navy today began a three-day war maneuver in
the Persian Gulf. The state-controlled news service ran the headline:
“The preparation of the Guards for the most dangerous events.”
At the same time, the Islamic regime’s Intelligence Ministry announced the arrest of what it called an information network connected to the BBC, the British Broadcasting Corporation.
Further confirmation
WND has received confirmation of the blasts from two additional
sources, one in Iran’s Foreign Ministry and another in the intelligence
agency of a European country.
Another source in Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s office told
WND the head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization, Fereydoon
Abbasi-Davani, will be replaced because of the leaked news on Fordow and
the delay in the talks with the 5-plus-1 powers over Iran’s nuclear
development. The 5-plus-1 nations are the permanent Security Council
members Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States plus
Germany.
The news became international when the Israeli intelligence agency confirmed it to the Times of London, the Israeli acting defense minister welcomed the news and the leading German daily Die Welt confirmed it through its own sources.
However, the White House has dismissed the report.
Spokesman Jay Carney told reporters Monday, “We have no information
to confirm the allegations in the report and we do not believe the
report is credible.”
Worries about Iran’s response
An official with a European intelligence agency who cannot be named
for security reasons said that both the IAEA and the United States are
worried about questioning Iran’s denial.
They are aware of Iran’s lies, the official said, but fear Tehran
could stop the cooperation it so far has provided to the IAEA over
inspections and derail any future talks with the 5-plus-1.
The official said the regime’s response and its censorship of the
details of the news alone verify that some kind of incident took place.
He said Iran could lose all negotiating power if it admits the incident
happened.
The Iranian Foreign Ministry source, in confirming the explosions,
said today the Iranian Air Force is on high alert for war. The regime
believes Israel and certain powers have started a plot to destabilize
the regime’s nuclear installations and economy.
Internal troubles
Since WND reported the explosions, the Iranian currency, which had
already been battered by international sanctions, has lost another 20
percent in value.
A source in the regime’s Revolutionary Guards intelligence unit told
WND the situation in Iran is troubling. He reported an explosion at the
Guards’ Hamzeh 21 base and the discovery of two bombs at the secret
nuclear plant in Najaf Abad. He said Quds Force officers have been
ordered to Lebanon to assist Hezbollah in evacuating some of the
southern villages in what appears to be planned aggression against
Israel.
WND reported Jan. 21
that the regime’s intelligence agency received information of major
covert operations planned by Israel and other countries to set back
Iran’s nuclear program while avoiding a larger-scale war.
The last meeting between U.N. inspectors and Iranian counterparts was held in Tehran two weeks ago.
At the meeting, inspectors failed to get the regime to allow inspection
of the Parchin military site where it is believed nuclear component
tests were carried out. The inspectors left Tehran Jan. 18, three days
before the Fordow explosions.
Last September, Iranian officials said they had thwarted attempted sabotage at the Fordow uranium enrichment plant.
“The enemies intended to repeat a Chernobyl-like disaster through
selling (booby-trapped) equipment and blowing up the centrifuges at the
Fordow site, but their plot was discovered and foiled by the Iranian
scientists’ wisdom and tact,” Abbas-Ali Mansouri, a member of the
Iranian parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Commission,
was quoted as saying by Fars News Agency.
The head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization, Fereydoon
Abbasi-Davani, told Fars that separate attacks on Iran’s centrifuges –
through tiny explosives meant to disable key parts of the machines –
were discovered before the blasts could go off on timers.
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