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After the delivery of the designs to Iran on March 3, 2000, the CIA extended the employment of the Russian emigre to at least March 2003, with the intention of conveying the flawed TBA-480 plans to another country suspected of interest in developing nuclear weapons.
The U.S. and its allies fear Iran's program aims to develop nuclear weapons. Iran denies the charges, and says its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only.
26 April 1984 CURRENT STATUS OF THE IRANIAN NUCLEAR PROGRAM Iran lacks the trained scientific workforce and facilities to produce nuclear weapons, and will need at least a decade to develop them. Few of the Islamic loyalists staffing the Nuclear Research Center in Teheran have scientific training.
The Trump administration unilaterally declared Saturday that international sanctions on Iran, lifted as part of a 2015 nuclear accord, have been reimposed. There's one problem: Britain, China ...
It would reimpose the arms embargo, ban Iran from developing ballistic missiles capable of delivering nuclear weapons and bring back targeted sanctions on dozens of individuals and entities.
IRAN could develop a deadly nuclear weapon before the end of the year, a top US official has claimed, despite the threat of further tough sanctions from the US as tensions between the two ...
On paper, Merlin was supposed to stunt the development of Tehran's nuclear programme by sending Iran's weapons experts down the wrong technical path. The CIA believed that once the Iranians had the...
In 2012, sixteen U.S. intelligence agencies, including the CIA, reported that Iran was pursuing research that could enable it to produce nuclear weapons, but was not attempting to do so.
The 2007 National Intelligence Estimate on Iran’s Nuclear Intentions and Capabilities The controversy over the estimate was rife with ironies. For those taken aback by that first clause, the irony was that the estimate attributed the Iranian decision to halt its nuclear weapons pro-gram precisely to the international pressure that the
Stuxnet is a malicious computer worm, first uncovered in 2010, thought to have been in development since at least 2005.Stuxnet targets supervisory control and data acquisition systems and is believed to be responsible for causing substantial damage to the nuclear program of Iran.