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The shadowy military man believed to be at the heart of Iran's disputed nuclear activities likely lives under tight security and in secrecy to shield him against any assassins and keep him beyond the reach of UN sleuths, nuclear experts say. A UN nuclear watchdog report this week identified Mohsen Fakhrizadeh as a key figure in suspected Iranian activities to develop the technology and skills needed for nuclear weapons and suggested he may still play a role in such efforts.
Fakhrizadeh, reportedly a senior officer in the Islamic state's elite Revolutionary Guards, was the only Iranian official named in a detailed annex of the report, which said Tehran appeared to have worked on designing a nuclear weapon. "He is viewed as extremely important," said US-based proliferation expert David Albright, referring to assessments of Western intelligence officials. Fakhrizadeh was named in a 2007 UN resolution on Iran as a person involved in nuclear or ballistic activities. An IAEA report the following year also referred to him briefly.
But analysts acknowledged that very little is publicly known about Fakhrizadeh, described by Albright's think tank as a nuclear engineer who has overseen a number of projects related to weaponisation research and development. "He is a mystery man," said one official from a country, which accuses Tehran of seeking to develop atomic bombs.
Greg Thielmann, of the Washington-based Arms Control Association, said he had never seen a photograph of Fakhrizadeh but that he may still be prominent in Iran's activities. "He was certainly central to the nuclear weapons programme halted in 2003 and I assume he continued to be important in sustaining and perhaps co-ordinating ongoing work related to future weaponisation," Thielmann said.
That the United Nations' International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has "long been seeking to interview him, and the Iranians have been refusing, is telling," he said. A European-based proliferation analyst said he came up with a "big nothing" when he tried to write a paper on Fakhrizadeh. "He is the one sort of constant that keeps coming up but I must confess I really don't know much about him."
Albright said he believed Fakhrizadeh's security was stepped up after the killings of nuclear scientists in attacks Iran blames on Israel and other foes. In July, gunmen shot dead university lecturer Darioush Rezaie in eastern Tehran, the third murder of a scientist since 2009. One was killed in a car bomb, the second by a device detonated remotely.
"I would imagine he is in hiding. He's definitely a target," Albright said. "But they have to worry because Tehran is not that closed. It is not like Moscow in the Cold War." Iran denies Western accusations it is trying to acquire the capabilities to build atom bombs, saying such weapons of mass destruction are against Islam and its nuclear work aims at the peaceful generation of electric power.
But the IAEA report, released last Tuesday amid media speculation of Israeli strikes against Iran, lent independent weight to suspicions in the West that Iran's nuclear programme ultimately has military goals. "The report can rationally be explained only if a purpose of these Iranian activities was to develop a nuclear warhead to be delivered by a ballistic missile," a senior Western official said, adding it contained "hard evidence". Iran has dismissed the report as "politically motivated" and its findings as based on forged evidence.
The IAEA document painted a picture of a concerted weapons programme that was halted in 2003 - when Iran came under increased Western pressure - but some activities later resumed. The report does not assert that Iran has resumed a full-scale nuclear programme, the Western official said. But, he added, "since halting its comprehensive and relatively open programme in 2003, Iran has continued to engage in activities that have relevance to the development of a nuclear weapon."
The IAEA report said Fakhrizadeh was executive officer of the so-called AMAD Plan, which according to its information carried out studies related to uranium, high explosives and the revamping of a missile cone to accommodate a warhead. The work stopped "rather abruptly" in late 2003, the agency said, citing information it had received from member states.
But the data also indicated that some of the activities later re-started and Fakhrizadeh "retained the principal organisational role". One country had told the IAEA he now heads the Organisation of Defensive Innovation and Research. "The Agency is concerned because some of the activities undertaken after 2003 would be highly relevant to a nuclear weapon programme," the IAEA document said. One Western diplomat said Fakhrizadeh was the "pervasive thread" in the UN agency's report. Citing intelligence sources, Albright said Fakhrizadeh had been "extremely upset" about the 2003 order to halt the work. But he said Fakhrizadeh had continued to receive money and run institutes, also suggesting some activities did not stop.

Copyright Reuters, 2011

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