
 The secret, one-on-one nuclear negotiations President Barack Obama launched  with Iran have run into a blank wall. A senior Iranian team member, Mostafa  Dolatyar, said Friday, Dec. 14 in New Delhi that the diplomatic process for  solving the nuclear issue with Iran was in effect going nowhere, because the  demand that Tehran halt its 20-percent enrichment of uranium “doesn’t make  sense.” He went on to say: “They [the world powers] have made certain connections  with purely technical issues and something purely political. In so far as this  is the mentality and this is the approach from 5 + 1 (the Six World Powers) - or  whatever else you call it - definitely there is no end for this game.” debkafile: The phrase “or  whatever else you call it” may be taken as Iran’s first veiled reference to the  direct talks with Washington that were launched Dec. 1 in the Swiss town of  Lausanne. After more than 15 years of on-and-off, largely aimless, nuclear diplomacy  with world powers and evasive tactics with the UN nuclear agency, Tehran is for  the first time showing signs of impatience and not just is usual disdain. This  is because two things have changed: 1. For all those years, Tehran availed itself of every diplomatic opening for  protracted bargaining about its nuclear program for the sake of buying time,  free of pressure, to push that program forward. Now, the Iranians are telling  the US and Europe that they have arrived at their destination. For them, time is  no longer of essence, as it may be for the West. 2.  The second development was revealed on Dec. 5 by The Wall Street  Journal in a short leader captioned “From Bushehr to the Bomb.” This  revelation was not picked up by any other Western - or even Israeli -  publication despite its sensational nature. American, Russian and Israeli nuclear experts have always maintained that the  technology for extracting plutonium from fuel rods was too expensive and  complicated to be practical - and certainly beyond Iran’s capacity. This means that Tehran can easily manufacture plutonium bombs without  building a large plutonium reactor like the one under construction at Arak. The paper goes on to reveal that, by this method, Iran could extract 220  pounds (just under 100 kilos) of plutonium, enough to produce as many as “24  Nagasaki-type bombs” – a reference to the World War II bombing of the Japanese  city on Aug. 9, 1945. One of those bombs – nicknamed “Fat Man” (after Winston Churchill) – is equal  to 20 kilotons. What Mostafa Dolatyar was saying in effect is that Iran has outplayed its  adversaries up to the game’s finishing line.
Mostafa Dolatyar is not just a faceless official. He is head of the  Iranian foreign ministry’s think tank, the Institute for Political and  International Studies, as well as a senior member of the Iranian team facing US  negotiators in Lausanne. His remarks were undoubtedly authorized by the office  of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei who, through him, posted a message to  Washington: If the enrichment suspension demand stands, the game’s over.
Drawing on US intelligence  sources, the paper suggested that the withdrawal of 136 fuel rods from Iran’s  nuclear reactor at Bushehr in mid-October – on the pretext of wandering metal  bolts – and the rods’ return in the last week of November “could have been a  test run for the Iranians should they decide to reprocess those rods into  weapons-grade plutonium.”
The  Wall Street Journal begs to differ:  “…experts tell us that the rapid  extraction of weapons-usable plutonium from spent fuel rods is a straightforward  process that can be preformed in a fairly small (and easily secreted)  space.”
debkafile’s  military and intelligence sources note that if this disclosure represents the  true state of Iran’s nuclear program, the game really is over. The  diplomacy-cum-sanctions policy pursued by the West to force Iran to abandon  enrichment and shut down its underground facility in Fordo has become  irrelevant.  So, too, have the red lines Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin  Netanyahu drew so graphically before the UN Assembly on September 27.