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    AP Exclusive: Iran prez said pushing for nukes

    VIENNA (AP) — Iran's president wants to shed the nation's secrecy and forge ahead openly with developing nuclear weapons but is opposed by the clerical leadership, which is worried about international reaction to such a move, says an intelligence assessment shared with The Associated Press.

    That view, from a nation with traditionally reliable intelligence from the region, cannot be confirmed and contrasts with assessments by other countries that view Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as relatively moderate on the nuclear issue compared to the country's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

    Attempts to interpret Iran's goals are important because as it expands uranium enrichment, it is moving closer to being able to make a nuclear weapon by the day, even as it asserts that it is not interested in such arms and its programs are geared only to making reactor fuel.

    A U.S. official cited one assessment he has seen suggesting Ahmadinejad may be more "moderate" — more open to talks with the international community on resolving nuclear concerns than Khamenei. He asked for anonymity because his information was privileged.

    But a blunt comment by Ahmadinejad last month raises questions. While repeating that Iran does not want nuclear arms, he openly reinforced its ability to make them, telling Iranian state TV that "if we want to make a bomb, we are not afraid of anybody."

    That defiant statement fits the scenario laid down by the intelligence assessment shared with the AP, depicting Ahmadinejad as wanting to move publicly to develop a nuclear program.

    Ahmadinejad is pushing "to shake free of the restraints Iran has imposed upon itself, and openly push forward to create a nuclear bomb," says the assessment. But Khamenei, whose word is final on nuclear and other issues, "wants to progress using secret channels, due to concern about a severe response from the West," says the report.

    Officials at the Iranian president's office were not available for comment Friday.

    The varying views reflect the difficulties that intelligence agencies face when probing a secretive nation that plays its cards close to its chest. Lines of division are murky. Alliances shift and positions change, leaving governments and private analysts frustrated as they try to nail down Tehran's nuclear end game.

    They converge, however in noting that recent political divisions between Ahmadinejad and Khamenei have spilled over to encompass Iran's nuclear activities to a greater degree than before.

    While much about Iran's nuclear program is opaque, the growing capacity — if not the intention — to make weapons is on the record, captured in International Atomic Energy Agency reports documenting the expansion of Iran's enrichment program from its clandestine beginnings more than a decade ago to one that has produced enough material for more than two nuclear bombs.

    More recently Iran has begun enriching to higher levels that would lessen the time needed to make weapons-grade material. And its stonewalling of an IAEA probe based on U.S. and other intelligence of secret work on components of a nuclear weapons program is adding to concerns raised by Tehran's refusal to freeze enrichment despite U.N. sanctions.

    "They claim that all of their activities are for peaceful purposes," IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano told the AP Friday. "But we have information that might have military implications and there are other activities that we don't know well, so it is difficult for us to draw a conclusion it is exclusively for peaceful purposes."

    Intelligence reports of tensions between Ahmadinejad and the ruling clerics are in line with other signs showing Ahmadinejad at odds with Khamenei with less than two-years to go into his presidency.

    In recent months, Ahmadinejad apparently fired — and was forced by Khamenei to reinstate — his interior minister in what some analysts see as a rebuffed attempt by the president to eliminate rivals to candidates he would like to see in positions of power, once his second and last term ends in 2013. That prompted an outburst of public criticism and led rivals in parliament to start proceedings that could in the most extreme case lead to impeachment.

    Reports of disagreement on nuclear issues predate that dispute, but some officials from member nations of the Vienna-based IAEA see tensions over the future of the nuclear program sharpening.

    Proliferation expert David Albright of the Institute for Science and International Security says his briefings from European government officials who have seen the latest U.S. intelligence assessment on the Islamic Republic seem to support the assessment shared with the AP that Khamenei is worried about how the world would react to a nuclear-armed Iran.

    "There is a lot of caution in the regime about the implication of building nuclear weapons," says Albright. Asked whether Ahmadinejad or Khamenei have been the most circumspect, he says "the implication is that it was the Supreme Leader."

    The leadership is "worried about starting a nuclear weapons race and worried about the international impact," said Albright, naming reactions from regional powers Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Turkey as that of greatest concern to Tehran. Both Egypt and the Saudis have indicated that they would contemplate acquiring nuclear weapons if Iran had them.

    One theory voiced by government officials and private analysts is that Iran might be looking to reach the level just short of making nuclear weapons — but able to do so quickly if it feels threatened. That would fit in with Khamenei's reported cautious stance.

    In any case, Ahmadinejad seems to be further weakened by the dispute. That leaves the Revolutionary Guard — the military-industrial powerhouse that is increasingly asserting itself in most aspects of Iran's society — as a beneficiary says the intelligence assessment.

    "Khamenei has decided to transfer engagement with the most sensitive parts of the nuclear program, including activity that can be used for nuclear weapons, from ... the group of scientists at the Defense Ministry, who are identified with Ahmadinejad, to a special body in the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corp.," it says. "This, due to the increasing lack of trust the Leader has in people in sensitive positions, who are identified with the President."

    The summary interprets the apparent decision to give the guard greater say over nuclear issues as a boost to its quest "to establish its status as a leading power force in the regime."

    _______

    George Jahn can be contacted under http://twitter.com/georgejahn

    ____

    Bradley Klapper in Washington contributed.

     

    290 comments

    • the rock  •  7 mths ago
      Hey is there any doubt this man is a menace ??
    • red, white and blue  •  7 mths ago
      America was and is founded on the principles of reason and common sense. That's one reason we have a hard time understanding the irrational motives of dictatorships. And Iran is one hell of an irrational...and dangerous...dictatorship.
    • Remember Building 7  •  7 mths ago
      AP starts out with an inflammatory headline and then follows up with a story that contradicts the inflammatory headline statement. And then does not reveal it's source. Wow. Nice yellow journalism and propaganda from AP. At least they're consistent.
    • UthinkUknow  •  7 mths ago
      Oh no! Be afraid...be very afraid...because I have produced enough methane out of my butt in the years I have been alive that would allow me to blow something up - twice! BUT THAT IS NOT WHAT I AM USING IT FOR!!! As long as we continue with the impression that Iranians & their leader(s) are unempathetic, heartless, demonic, insane, mruderous, suicidal Muslims, we will continue to be afraid by stories like this. I wonder who in Iran (& every other Muslim country) builds streets, teaches the kids, performs weddings, etc.? The same suicidal Muslims?!? We are all people! Also, how can we fault Iran for wanting Nuclear Weapons when we have them? "OH! Because those crazy Muslims will use them!" I bet that is the same thing we thought when Russia developed them, or China, or Pakistan, or Israel... Who is the only nation in history that has used nuclear weapons??? Huh...let's think about this...huh
    • Outrun My Gun  •  7 mths ago
      Well, don't just stand there. Let's send him some!
    • TEA Time  •  7 mths ago
      The USA spent hundreds of billions of our wealth to defang Iraq. For what benefit to America? The USA would be so much better off by becoming energy self-sufficeint so that we could get the heck away from this problemed corner of the world..
    • Rod  •  7 mths ago
      I want to know why Iran can't have a nuke. I am as Patriotic as they come, but fair is fair. I served 12 years in the military, before you armchair soldiers chime in. America is the only country that ever used a nuclear weapon. As a matter of fact, we used nuclear weapons twice and we have so many that some are lost. We have over 5,000 nukes and that is after we got rid of some.

      To be honest, if you don't have a nuke nowadays, you don't have respect. Its like being the only person on the block without a security sign in your lawn. That makes you look like an easy target. Its like owning a handgun for self defense. You know, you don't really want to kill someone, but we hope we will use our gun during a hime invasion.

      You see, if Saddam had a nuke, he would not have swung from the that rope. Kim Yung Il has a nuke and all we do is scream demands at him across the border at him, but we won't cross it, because we are afraid that he will use that nuke that he screams that he has. No one will bother us, because they know we have nuke pointed everywhere at all time and we have proven that we will use them...twice.

      The only way we can tell people to stop having nukes is for everyone to stop having nukes. And in all honesty, nukes are outdated. Their are much better weapons of mass destruction that don't get discussed.
    • Udahman62  •  7 mths ago
      If the media can't sensationlize it...it won't grab your attention and you won't read it! That said...they're very distrustful as eveidenced by all the crap thay lay claim to and refusee to apologize for...much less admit who their sources are or if they legitimate...or if they're just making this up as they go along
    • TEA Time  •  7 mths ago
      The USA should finish building the missle defense shield that Visonary Ronald Reagan began. Instead of us getting into another terrible war with ground troops and death, let us simply make other people's weapons ineffective. Reagan got it started, time to finish the project. Keep our children safe without having to invade yet another country.
    • billiam  •  7 mths ago
      Who actually believed Iran's nuclear program was for energy in the first place??
    • jtheat  •  7 mths ago
      You want nukes? Ok, you asked for them. You hear that Isreal? Level this piece of crap country.
    • Michael Pakal-Moon  •  7 mths ago
      You want NUKES, you're going to get them soon enough, delivered via Israel. Todays weather report for Tehran, 5 million degrees Farenhiet
    • NuclearWar  •  7 mths ago
      Remember Obama said that nuclear weapons in Iran were not an option? He Lied.
    • ******  •  7 mths ago
      If you think Iran hasn't been aiming for nuke weapons for the last 15 yrs, you are delirious and living in a world of unreality.
    • Rat Fink McRoy  •  7 mths ago
      People make the idiotic argument that if the US has them or Israel has them, then why not Iran? Would you rather Canada have nukes or Somalia? Would you rather Sweden have nukes or Syria? Don't compare a country ruled by religious fanatics with sane responsible nations.
    • Maziar  •  7 mths ago
      As a Persian,I'm really ashamed and disappointed......why our government just can't be peaceful ? they always want to do something against the whole world....
    • Max  •  7 mths ago
      America IS NOT god of the world.
    • Ektelon  •  7 mths ago
      Why isn't this front page news?
    • JohnL  •  7 mths ago
      So mostly what this is about today is the lame stream media putting out the scare! They are using Jedi mind tricks at the behest of their handlers to promote unrest amoungst the sheeple inorder to keep the heard together, can I get a baaaahmen! If one guy in Norway can take out almost 100 people, the 10 well armed patriots could take out 537 scumbags on the hill couldnt they? Dont correct my number to 538 ok, Gabby already got one to the noggin and aint coming back so as far as Im concerned the tide is already changing....1 down and 537 more to go!!!!
    • wayne  •  7 mths ago
      Muslims are cowards
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