LONDON – Iran would need at least two years to produce its first nuclear weapon but is not involved in an all-out “crash effort” to build a bomb, a respected think tank said on Thursday. In a new report analysing the available evidence, the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) said it believed the timescale should give more time to international efforts to negotiate a solution.
The report by the London-based body said Iran’s nuclear capability had been growing “inexorably” for 25 years and its claim to be pursuing the programme purely for civilian energy purposes was “not credible”. But “the endeavour has not been a crash effort akin to America’s Manhattan Project, which produced two kinds of nuclear weapons in three and a half years, or Pakistan’s nuclear bomb project, which reached the nuclear-weapons threshold about 11 years after launching an enrichment programme,” it said.
The report added: “If Iran wanted to produce the fissile material for a weapon as soon as possible, it could have moved more quickly.” However, it notes that: “Overall, Iran’s leaders have tried to keep their presumed weapons intentions ambiguous.” IISS director general and chief executive John Chipman said the analysis, conducted by former US State Department official and non-proliferation expert Mark Fitzpatrick, backed up “the more relaxed timelines” voiced recently in the United States and Israel.