China: Report that we gave info about Iran to IAEA is 'groundless' The Associated Press April 3, 2008 Haaretz Original Source: http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/971579.html China dismissed Thursday a news report saying it had provided the International Atomic Energy Agency with intelligence linked to Iran's alleged attempts to make nuclear arms. China opposes harsh UN Security Council sanctions against Iran and has consistently watered down a U.S.-led push to impose severe penalties on Tehran for its nuclear defiance since the first set of sanctions was passed in late 2006. On Wednesday, The Associated Press reported that diplomats have said that China, an opponent of harsh United Nations Security Council sanctions against Iran, has provided the IAEA recently with intelligence linked to Iranian nuclear program. Beijing, along with Moscow, has acted as a brake within the council, consistently watering down a U.S.-led push to impose severe penalties on Tehran for its nuclear defiance since the first set of sanctions was passed in late 2006. The Associated Press report published Wednesday was totally groundless and out of ulterior motives, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said. She did not give further details. Jiang restated China's position on the Iran nuclear issue: that it should be resolved peacefully through dialogue. Parties should fully exert creativity and show flexibility and proactively seek a proper... resolution of the issue, she said. A Chinese decision to provide information for use in the UN nuclear watchdog's attempts to probe Iran's purported nuclear weapons program would appear to reflect growing international unease about how honest the Islamic republic has been in denying it ever tried to make such arms. China's venture was revealed by two senior diplomats with good contacts to the International Atomic Energy Agency, with one commenting late last week and the other Wednesday. The IAEA declined comment. The diplomats said Beijing was the most surprising entry among a fairly substantial list of nations recently forwarding information to the agency that adds to previously provided intelligence, and which could be relevant in attempts to probe Iran for past or present nuclear weapons research. But they said several other countries not normally considered to be in the anti-Iran camp had also done so in recent weeks. The diplomats - who demanded anonymity because their information was confidential - declined to name individual nations. But they attributed a generally increased flow of information to concern sparked by a multimedia presentation to the 35 IAEA board members by the agency in February of intelligence previously forwarded by member states on Iran's alleged clandestine nuclear arms program. One of the diplomats said the agency was also on the lookout for misleading information it was given either inadvertently or in attempts to falsely implicate Iran. One example, he said was a document showing experiments with implosion technology that can be used to detonate a nuclear device. While the document appeared genuine, it was unclear whether it originated from Iran, said the diplomat. Suspected weapons-related work outlined in the February presentation and IAEA reports preceding it include: * Uranium conversion linked to high explosives testing and designs of a missile re-entry vehicle, all apparently interconnected through involvement of officials and institutions * Procurement of so-called dual use equipment and experiments that also could be used in both civilian and military nuclear programs, and * Iran's possession of a 15-page document outlining how to form uranium metal into the shape of a warhead. A http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/930707.html U.S. intelligence estimate late last year said Tehran worked on nuclear weapons programs until 2003, while Israel and other nations say such work continued past that date