Iran's Nuclear Program: Status (CRS Report for Congress)
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Release Date |
Revised Dec. 20, 2019 |
Report Number |
RL34544 |
Report Type |
Report |
Authors |
Paul K. Kerr |
Source Agency |
Congressional Research Service |
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Summary:
Iran’s nuclear program began during the 1950s. The United States has expressed concern since
the mid-1970s that Tehran might develop nuclear weapons. Iran’s construction of gas centrifuge
uranium enrichment facilities is currently the main source of proliferation concern. Gas
centrifuges can produce both low-enriched uranium (LEU), which can be used in nuclear power
reactors, and weapons-grade highly enriched uranium (HEU), which is one of the two types of
fissile material used in nuclear weapons.
The United States has assessed that Tehran possesses the technological and industrial capacity to
produce nuclear weapons, but has not yet mastered all of the necessary technologies for building
such weapons. Whether Iran has a viable design for a nuclear weapon is unclear. A National
Intelligence Estimate made public in 2007 assessed that Tehran “halted its nuclear weapons
program” in 2003. The estimate, however, also assessed that Tehran is “keeping open the option
to develop nuclear weapons” and that any decision to end a nuclear weapons program is
“inherently reversible.” U.S. intelligence officials have reaffirmed this judgment on several
occasions.
Obtaining fissile material is widely regarded as the most difficult task in building nuclear
weapons. As of January 2014, Iran had produced an amount of LEU containing up to 5%
uranium-235 which, if further enriched, could theoretically have produced enough HEU for as
many as eight nuclear weapons. Iran had also produced LEU containing nearly 20% uranium-
235; the total amount of this LEU would, if it had been in the form of uranium hexafluoride and
further enriched, have been sufficient for a nuclear weapon. After the Joint Plan of Action, which
Tehran concluded with China, France, Germany, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United
States (collectively known as the “P5+1”), went into effect in January 2014, Iran either converted
much of its LEU containing nearly 20% uranium-235 for use as fuel in a research reactor located
in Tehran, or prepared it for that purpose. Iran has diluted the rest of that stockpile so that it
contained no more than 5% uranium-235.
Although Iran claims that its nuclear program is exclusively for peaceful purposes, the program
has generated considerable concern that Tehran is pursuing a nuclear weapons program. The U.N.
Security Council responded to Iran’s refusal to suspend work on its uranium enrichment program
by adopting several resolutions that imposed sanctions on Tehran. Despite evidence that sanctions
and other forms of pressure have slowed the program, Iran continued to enrich uranium, install
additional centrifuges, and conduct research on new types of centrifuges. Tehran has also worked
on a heavy-water reactor, which was a proliferation concern because its spent fuel would have
contained plutonium—the other type of fissile material used in nuclear weapons. However,
plutonium must be separated from spent fuel—a procedure called “reprocessing.” Iran has said
that it will not engage in reprocessing.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) monitors Iran’s nuclear facilities and has
verified that Tehran’s declared nuclear facilities and materials have not been diverted for military
purposes. The agency has also verified that Iran has implemented various restrictions on, and
provided the IAEA with additional information about, its uranium enrichment program and
heavy-water reactor program pursuant to the July 2015 Joint Cooperative Plan of Action
(JCPOA), which Tehran concluded with the P5+1. On the JCPOA’s Implementation Day, which
took place on January 16, 2016, all of the previous Security Council resolutions’ requirements
were terminated. The nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) and U.N. Security Council
Resolution 2231, which the Council adopted on July 20, 2015, comprise the current legal
framework governing Iran’s nuclear program. Iran has continued to comply with the JCPOA and
resolution.
Iran and the IAEA agreed in 2007 on a work plan to clarify outstanding questions regarding
Tehran’s nuclear program, most of which concerned possible Iranian procurement activities and
research directly applicable to nuclear weapons development. A December 2015, report to the
IAEA Board of Governors from agency Director-General Yukiya Amano contains the IAEA’s
“final assessment on the resolution” of these outstanding issues.
Then-Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Wendy Sherman explained during an October
2013 hearing of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations that Iran would need as much as one
year to produce a nuclear weapon if the government made the decision to do so. At the time,
Tehran would have needed two to three months of this time to produce enough weapons-grade
HEU for a nuclear weapon. Iran’s compliance with the JCPOA has lengthened this time to one
year, according to U.S. officials. These estimates apparently assume that Iran would use its
declared nuclear facilities to produce fissile material for a weapon. However, Tehran would
probably use covert facilities for this purpose; Iranian efforts to produce fissile material for
nuclear weapons by using its known nuclear facilities would almost certainly be detected by the
IAEA.