Iran planning atomic ships in possible breach of nuclear deal December 14, 2016Iranian President Hassan Rouhani (PressTV)(PressTV)Iran planning atomic ships in possible breach of nuclear dealAfter Congress’ decision to extend the Iran Sanctions Act, Iran is striking back by ordering ships that could require nuclear fuel – which Iran is prohibited from having. Iran’s president on Tuesday ordered officials to draw up plans to build nuclear-powered ships and to show that the United States violated last year’s nuclear deal, in response to a vote by the US Congress to extend some sanctions on the country.The move by President Hassan Rouhani came in response to the extension of the Iran Sanctions Act, and was widely seen as posturing that would not affect the controversial nuclear deal concluded with world powers.The sanctions act awaits President Barack Obama’s signature to become law, and comes amid speculation over how President-elect Donald Trump, a critic of the nuclear deal, will address the issue when he assumes office next month.Rouhani’s letter, read aloud on state television and published by the official IRNA news agency, gave Ali Akbar Salehi of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization (IAEO) three months to come up with a plan for nuclear-powered ships and for producing fuel for them. A separate letter ordered Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif to “follow up on the US violations” of the nuclear deal.Rouhani “said the measures were warranted in light of the United States’ foot-dragging in fulfilling its commitments under the multilateral nuclear deal … and the recent ratification of anti-Iran legislation in the US Congress,” state television reported.Read Trump II: Challenges aheadForeign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said Iran has sent two letters in recent months to EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini to protest the sanctions legislation, which he called a violation of the nuclear deal, IRNA reported.The US bill, first passed by Congress in 1996 and renewed several times since then, allows America to impose economic sanctions on companies for doing business with Iran. It drew anger from Iran, which wrote to the United Nations over it and held a high-level meeting last week over how to respond.The White House has described the bill as unnecessary but said it didn’t violate the international accord signed by six world powers and Iran. Obama is expected to sign it into law ahead of the inauguration of Trump, who has vowed to renegotiate the Iran deal without offering specifics.A Breach of the Nuclear Deal?The nuclear deal limits Iran’s ability to enrich uranium in exchange for the lifting of some international economic sanctions. It allows Iran to conduct peaceful atomic research.Rouhani’s letter did not elaborate on what use the country had for nuclear-powered ships. However, the technology is predominantly used in military applications, as in submarines and aircraft carriers.In June 2012, an Iranian admiral was reported as saying the country had begun to design its first nuclear submarine, though the project never came to fruition. Iran has no aircraft carriers, but operates a fleet of conventionally powered Russian and locally made submarines.Read Israel sanctions dozens of clients of Hezbollah’s banking networkIran’s move toward nuclear-powered ships appears to be permitted under the nuclear deal, depending on the type of fuel used, said David Mortlock, who once served as director of international economic affairs at the White House National Security Council.“Essentially, the deal does not prevent this from happening so long as the nuclear work is done in a particular way, so long as it is transparent and so long as it doesn’t cross any lines,” Mortlock said.However, nuclear experts quoted by the UK’s Express newspaper stated warned that Rouhani’s move would require the country to enrich uranium to a fissile purity above the maximum level set by the nuclear deal.The nuclear deal restricts Iran to enriching uranium above a 3.67 percent purity for 15 years, a level unlikely to be enough to run such vessels. Nuclear technology needed for marine vessels requires uranium enriched to around 20 per cent purity.By: AP and World Israel News Staff Iran nuclear dealrouhaniSanctions