Iran is unlikely to be able to develop a nuclear bomb before 2015, the chief of Germany’s BND foreign intelligence agency said on Tuesday.
His estimate falls within the three to 10 year range of forecasts given by most international experts.
”It is difficult to give an exact estimate of the time,” BND head Ernst Uhrlau told a security conference organised by the Welt am Sonntag newspaper.
”According to the current rate of enrichment, the Islamic Republic will not have sufficient amounts of highly enriched uranium with which to build atomic weapons before 2010. For a nuclear bomb we are looking at around 2015,” said Uhrlau.
Iran is Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries’ second biggest oil exporter and denies accusations from the United States and other western nations that it wants to make nuclear weapons.
Tehran is in a stand-off with the international community over its programme to develop nuclear technology, which it says it needs to meet booming energy needs.
Talks between Iran and the European Union to explore a compromise on enrichment to avoid United Nations sanctions have collapsed.
Iran is hoping Russia and China, both major trade partners and Security Council veto holders, will prevent the US from pushing through anything more than largely symbolic sanctions.
Earlier this month the UN Security Council voted unanimously to impose financial and weapons sanctions on North Korea after it conducted a nuclear test. — Reuters