Iran says it downed Israeli drone over nuclear site

Agence France-Presse

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The nuclear site is Iran's main uranium enrichment site housing more than 16,000 centrifuges

INSIDE NATANZ. An unidentified International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspector disconnects the connections between the twin cascades for 20% uranium production at nuclear power plant of Natanz, some 300 kilometers south of Tehran on January, 20, 2014. AFP Photo

TEHRAN, Iran – Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guard said it has brought down an Israeli stealth drone above the Natanz uranium enrichment site in the center of the country.

“A spy drone of the Zionist regime (Israel) was brought down by a missile… This stealth drone was trying to approach the Natanz nuclear zone,” the corps said in a statement on its official website sepahnews.com.

“This act demonstrates a new adventurism by the Zionist regime… The Revolutionary Guard and the other armed forces reserve the right to respond to this act,” the statement added.

An Israeli spokesman told Agence France-Presse in Jerusalem on Sunday, August 24, that the military does “not address foreign media reports.”

Natanz is Iran’s main uranium enrichment site, housing more than 16,000 centrifuges. Around 3,000 more are at the Fordo plant, buried inside a mountain and hard to destroy.

Israel has often threatened to attack Iranian nuclear installations.

Iran and the P5+1 powers – Britain, China, France, Russia, the United States and Germany – reached a 6-month interim agreement under which Iran suspended part of its nuclear activities in return for a partial lifting of international sanctions.

In July that deal was extended by 4 months until November 24 to give the two sides more time to negotiate a final accord aimed at ending 10 years of tensions over Iran’s nuclear program.

The sides remain split on how much uranium enrichment Iran should be allowed to carry out.

Washington wants Tehran to slash its program by three-quarters, but Iran wants to expand enrichment ten-fold by 2021, chiefly to produce fuel for its Bushehr nuclear power plant.

Israel, a sworn enemy of Iran, opposes any agreement allowing Tehran to keep part of its uranium enrichment program, saying Iran could use the material to make an atomic bomb.

Iran has consistently denied wanting to make nuclear weapons. – Rappler.com

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