Israel hit part of Iran nuclear programme, Netanyahu says

Vocabulary: 343, Words: 731

Reuters A satellite image showing the aftermath of Israeli air strikes on the Parchin military complex in Iran (26 October 2024)

1Israel’s prime minister says it hit part of Iran’s nuclear programme last month, despite pleas from the US not to do so during the strikes it carried out in response to a missile attack.

2It’s not a secret. 3It was published,” Benjamin Netanyahu told the Israeli parliament. 4There is a specific component in their nuclear programme that was hit.”

5He gave no details, but last week Axios reported that anuclear weapons research facilitymaking plastic explosives at the Parchin military complex was destroyed.

6There was no immediate comment from Iran, but it has previously said the Israeli strikes caused limited damage to radar systems and that its nuclear activities are entirely peaceful.

7Iran has also insisted that it does not seek nuclear weapons, although evidence collected by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) suggests that until 2003 it conducted activities relevant to the development of a bomb. 8The agency says Iran has not yet answered outstanding questions related to its nuclear activity.

9The IAEA also says Iran has produced enough highly enriched uranium to build several nuclear weapons since the US abandoned a nuclear deal and reinstated crippling sanctions six years ago with Netanyahu’s support.

10On 26 October, the Israeli military announced it had conductedprecise strikes on military targets in Iranin response to the 1 October attack that saw almost 200 ballistic missiles launched towards Israel.

11The military said the targets included missile manufacturing facilities, as well as surface-to-air missile arrays and aerial capabilities intended to restrict Israel’s freedom of operation inside Iran.

12Iran’s military said the attacks causedlimited and minor damageto several radar systems and that four Iranian military officers and one civilian were killed. 13Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said the effect of the attacks should not bemagnified or downplayed”.

14Satellite images analysed by the BBC showed damage to four structures at Parchin, about 30km (18.5 miles) east of Tehran.

15Experts from the Institute for Science and International Security said three of the structures were related to missile production, and that the fourth, known as Taleghan 2, was previously involved in high explosive testing related to the development of nuclear weapons.

16Axios’s report cited unnamed US and Israeli officials as saying that intelligence services had detected recent activity at the Taleghan 2 facility that waspart of an effort inside the Iranian government to conduct research that could be used for the development of nuclear weapons but could also be presented as research for civilian purposes”.

17One former Israeli official said the strike destroyedsophisticated equipment used to design the plastic explosives that surround uranium in a nuclear device and are needed to detonate it”, according to the report.

18Benjamin Netanyahu told Israel’s parliament thata nuclear Iran poses a massive threat to our existence, to the peace agreements we aim to achieve with more of our neighbours and to global peace”.

19We will be tested on our ability to thwart their nuclear ambitions,” he added.

20He then mentioned the attack on thespecific componentof Iran’s nuclear programme before warning that theprogramme itself, its capacity to act here, has not yet been thwarted”.

21Before the Israeli strikes took place, US President Joe Biden had said publicly that he did not support attacks on Iran’s nuclear or oil facilities.

22President-elect Donald Trump, who is expected to take a harder line with Iran when he takes office in January, meanwhile said he had advised Netanyahu tohit the nuclear first and worry about the rest later”.

23Last week, Iranian President Massoud Pezeshkian told the head of the IAEA, Rafael Grossi, that Iran was committed to resolvingdoubts and ambiguitiessurrounding its nuclear activities.

24Mr Grossi visited Tehran ahead of a meeting of the IAEA’s board of governors this week, at which the UK, France and Germany are expected to pass a resolution critical of Iran’s co-operation.

25Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi warned that Tehran would "take countermeasures and new actions in our nuclear programme" in response to any such resolution.

26He also strongly denied media reports that Iran’s ambassador to the UN, Amir Saeed Iravani, had met Trump ally Elon Musk to defuse US-Iran tensions.

27We are still waiting for the new US administration to clarify its policies, and based on that, we will adjust our own policies. 28Right now, it is neither the time for such meetings nor is it appropriate," he said.

from BBC