http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/5346524.stm
Last Updated: Thursday, 14 September 2006
The UN nuclear watchdog has protested to the US government
over a report on Iran's nuclear programme, calling it "erroneous" and
"misleading".
In a leaked letter, the IAEA said a congressional report
contained serious distortions of the agency's own findings on Iran's nuclear
activity.
The IAEA also took "strong exception" to claims
made over the removal of a senior safeguards inspector.
There was no immediate comment from Washington over the
letter.
But Rep Rush Holt, a Democratic member of the House intelligence
committee, which released the report, said it had never been meant for release
to the public.
"This report was not ready for prime time and it was
not prepared in a way that we can rely on. It relied heavily on unclassified
testimony," he told the BBC's PM programme.
'Deja vu'
Signed by a senior director at the International Atomic
Energy Agency, Vilmos Cserveny, the letter raises objections over the
committee's report released on 23 August.
It says the report was wrong to say that Iran had enriched
uranium to weapons-grade level when the IAEA had only found small quantities of
enrichment at far lower levels.
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The letter took "strong exception to the incorrect and
misleading assertion" that the IAEA removed senior safeguards inspector
Chris Charlier for "allegedly raising concerns about Iranian
deception" over its programme.
It said Mr Charlier had been removed at the request of
Tehran, which has the right to make such an objection under agreed rules
between the agency and all states.
He remains head of a section investigating Iran, the IAEA
says.
The letter went on to brand "outrageous and
dishonest" a suggestion in the report that he was removed for not adhering
"to an unstated IAEA policy barring IAEA officials from telling the whole
truth" about Iran.
The letter, sent to Peter Hoekstra, head of the House of
Representatives' Select Committee on Intelligence, was aimed at setting
"the record straight on the facts", the IAEA said.
"This is a matter of the integrity of the IAEA and its
inspectors," spokeswoman Melissa Fleming said in a statement.
A Western diplomat called it "deja vu of the pre-Iraq
war period".
The IAEA and the US clashed over intelligence that Saddam
Hussein had weapons of mass destruction in the lead-up to the war in Iraq in
March 2003.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/5346524.stm
Published: 2006/09/14 17:07:19 GMT
© BBC MMVII
HAVE YOUR SAY
The IAEA have the right to complain
Robin Leith, New York
READ THE REPORT
US report on Iran's nuclear programme [689KB]
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/bsp/hi/pdfs/14_09_06_representatives.pdf
IAEA (UN) response to US report [227KB]
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/bsp/hi/pdfs/14_09_06_iaea.pdf