Iran Carried Out Implosion Tests for Nuclear Weapons Development, IAEA Reports
- Iran has conducted implosion tests considered vital for nuclear weapon development, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency report.
- The IAEA reported that Iran's near-weapons grade uranium stockpile increased from 133.8 kilograms in February to 408.6 kilograms in May.
- The IAEA found that the implosion tests were conducted at the Lavisan-Shian site and stated that these experiments have no civilian applications.
- Israeli journalist Yonah Jeremy Bob noted that Iran's ability to produce a crude nuclear weapon has significantly improved and could happen much faster than previously assessed.
14 Articles
14 Articles
UN's nuclear watchdog poised to declare Iran in violation of nonproliferation treaty
If the International Atomic Energy Agency goes ahead with the move, the Islamic Republic could respond by withdrawing from the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons Treaty entirely, a western official told Haaretz
Iran conducted tests critical for nuclear weapons development, says UN watchdog
Iran has conducted implosion tests that are critical for the development of a nuclear weapon and likely still possesses the technological know-how and means even though the nuclear weapons programme stands formally suspended, according to a report by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
UN agency in dramatic document: 'Iran conducted experimental nuclear test'
Experiments of this type are done exclusively to verify the operational capability of an atomic bomb, and have no civilian use, or even any other military use. By Yair Amar, JFeed Staff The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) shocked the international community when a research document it provided revealed that it has unambiguous evidence that Iran conducted a series of experiments related to the activation and detonation of a nuclear devi…
Iran carried out implosion tests for nuclear weapons development, IAEA reports
A new IAEA report reveals Iran carried out undeclared nuclear tests, prompting calls to refer the case to the UN Security Council. Much of the IAEA report is based on evidence from the Mossad.
Controversial truth-teller behind the organization's new release. But the report still threatens to torpedo Donald Trump's attempts to create peace in the Middle East.
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