Iran wants to have 60,000 centrifuges for enriching uranium, Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Monday was quoted by the Iranian Students News
Agency (ISNA) as saying during a tour of Iranian state-run television.
"We intend to have 60,000 centrifuges and, God willing, Iran will be able to
meet its needs in nuclear fuel by next year," Ahmadinejad was quoted as saying
in a corrected report.
An early report from ISNA said that the Islamic kingdom wanted to have 10,000
centrifuges for its nuke program, but it soon corrected its report saying that
the country to install 60,000 centrifuges.
The report is the same as what the president had said last week that Iran
intended to launch 60,000 centrifuges in its nuclear program.
Iran has so far built two cascades of 164 centrifuges each for uranium
enrichment, which can be used to make nuclear fuel or, in much higher grades,
the core of an atom bomb.
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad-Ali Hosseini confirmed earlier
this month Iran's plan to install 3,000 centrifuges for uranium enrichment by
March 2007.
Asked whether Tehran would execute its plan to install 3,000 centrifuges by
the end of the current Iranian year, which will end on March 20, 2007, the
spokesman answered that "Iranian officials and experts are still seeking to
carry out this (plan)."
The United States has been seeking to impose sanctions on Iran through the UN
Security Council on the grounds that Tehran is developing a nuclear-weapon
program under the guise of a civilian-use program.
However, Iran has insisted that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes
and voiced hope for talks on the nuclear standoff. But the Islamic Republic
rejected a prerequisite of suspending nuclear work for such talks.