N TERN ATI • N A [BACKGROUND Danger From Iran Iran may have nuclear weapons now and sees the State of Israel as a target. \/ DOUGLAS DAVIS Foreign Correspondent T he threat of nuclear and ballistic prolifera- tion in the aftermath of the Cold War has taken a quantum leap following reports that Islamic funda- mentalist Iran already may have crossed the final threshold to nuclear capability. First item on the agenda will be the Middle East military balance, which will undergo a radical change if, as appears likely, Iran mat- ches its nuclear weapons to a new generation of long- range Scud-D missiles which will bring Israel within range in the coming year. Late last year, both U.S. Congressional reports and CIA assessments agreed that Iran had assembled "all or virtually all" of the corn- ponents necessary for pro- ducing two to three nuclear weapons. At the time, it was estimated that these weapons would be opera- tional between February and April of this year. Iran's advanced nuclear research program was halted shortly after the 1979 Islamic revolution and the accession to power of Ayatollah Ruhollah Kho- meini, who declared that atomic weapons were "satanic." All Akhbar Hashemi Raf- The Iranians are entering the vacuum left by the destruction of Iraq's non-conventional power. sanjani, however, had no such inhibitions: Plans to develop a nuclear capability were revived when he became Speaker of the Ma- jlis (parliament) and ac- celerated when he con- solidated his power and assumed the presidency. Widely portrayed in the West as a moderate, Mr. Rafsanjani invited Iran's leading nuclear scientists to return from exile and work was resumed on two un- completed nuclear reactors, each of which possesses 1,000-megawatt capacity, in the town of Bushir. In addition to the Bushir reactors (and reportedly with assistance from India and China), Iran has estab- lished an operational reactor near Teheran, three nuclear research facilities in Isfahan, Teheran and Kharg, as well as a uranium- enrichment plant at Kazvin. Another signal of the im- portance Mr. Rafsanjani at- taches to his country's nuclear program was the elevation of Dr. Ali Reza Mo'ayeri, head of Iran's Atomic Energy Agency, to the post of Deputy Prime Minister, accountable direct- ly to the president himself. In addition to its quest for nuclear capability, Iran is also well on the way to ac- quiring the means of THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 31