TEHRAN - Iran announced had successfully enriched uranium to make 
nuclear fuel, a major breakthrough in its disputed atomic drive. 
 
 
   Iran's hard-line President 
 Mahmoud Ahmadinejad speaks in Mashhad, Iran's holiest city Tuesday, April 
 11, 2006. [AP] | 
  | 
 
  | 
  | 
"I am 
officially announcing that Iran has joined the group of those countries which 
have nuclear technology. This is the result of the Iranian nation's resistance," 
Ahmadinejad said on Tuesday. 
"Based on international regulations, we will continue our path until we 
achieve production of industrial-scale enrichment," he told officials and some 
ambassadors from regional states gathered in the northeastern city of Mashhad. 
The United Nations has said Iran must halt uranium enrichment, a process 
Western nations fear Tehran wants to master so that it can develop nuclear 
weapons. Tehran insists its aims are entirely peaceful. 
The United States warned that Iran's latest declared nuclear advance could 
accelerate international pressures on Tehran. 
"If the regime continues to move in the direction that it is currently, then 
we will be talking about the way forward with the other members of the (U.N.) 
Security Council and Germany about how to address this going forward," White 
House spokesman Scott McClellan said. 
The State Department said it was unable to confirm Iran's announcement and 
some experts said even if Tehran's assertions were accurate, it would still be 
years before the Islamic state was able to produce a nuclear weapon. 
Iran's Atomic Energy Organization head said earlier that Iran had enriched 
uranium to a level used in power plants, a major step forward in the country's 
nuclear program. 
"I am proud to announce that we have started enriching uranium to the 3.5 
percent level," Gholamreza Aghazadeh said, adding that the pilot enrichment 
plant in Natanz, south of Tehran, was now working. 
SETBACK TO SECURITY COUNCIL EFFORTS 
Iran's announcement is a serious setback to U.N. Security Council efforts to 
have Tehran halt enrichment work and it could escalate a confrontation with 
Western powers leading to consideration of sanctions against the Islamic 
Republic.