Iran's Nuke Admission
But Iran's declaration is still incomplete and troubling, say those familiar with the report. Tehran did not adequately account for the presence of highly enriched uranium on some of the specialized centrifuges it has obtained, and it did not admit it ever intended to produce a nuclear weapon. That fuels fears that Iran still harbors nuclear ambitions, despite its pledge to foreign ministers from Germany, Britain and France last month to freeze the nuclear program. And it "raises suspicions that Iran has [another] hidden enrichment plant" or some other illicit supply of uranium, says David Albright, president of the Institute for Science and International Security.
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