As I say, you can't actually weaponize a nuclear capacity until you have a nuclear capacity. It's almost like a second stage. You can't get weapons-grade plutonium until you can make plutonium. The stuff that was being smuggled in was the stuff to develop the nuclear capacity. It would have been hard to tie it specifically to weapons at that point because they just weren't developed enough at that point for that distinction to be meaningful. It becomes more a trial of intention rather than looking at the goods on the ground. I mean, there was an attempt, I would say, to actually weaponize before they developed the capacity to do so, which is what stopped.
One also has to keep in mind the kind of bureaucratic structure of Iran. We've been talking about weaponization on the one hand and incitement to genocide on the other from Iran, but the reality is they come from two different parts of the Iranian government. It's the mullahs who control the nuclearization, very strangely, whereas Ahmadinejad is kind of a civilian branch of the government, although I would call him a stooge of the mullahs. What Ahmadinejad is saying is worrisome, of course, simply in terms of the content of what he says. It's even more worrisome because in my view it's a reflection of the views of the mullahs who are not as public on these points of view, but he's just repeating. It's the mullahs who at the end of the day run the nuclear threat.
This report involved what a particular branch of the government was going to do about weapons, and I think it was the defence department within Iran. The mullahs basically pulled the defence department out of this issue for the time being, but it didn't change their intent one iota, as far as I could tell.
There's one other point I wanted to make here because I've been dealing with governments on this issue. Some of them tried to work the issue the other way, and, rather than join them, kind of oppose them and say that they couldn't really deal with incitement to genocide because it would make it more difficult for them to deal with nuclearization or weaponization. They say if they want to negotiate with Iran on weaponization they have to lay off on incitement to genocide. They say if they start prosecuting the president, Iran is not going to talk to them at all on anything, basically.
I reject that analysis. In my view, I think you're going to be more effective in quelling the nuclear threat if you confront incitement to genocide directly. I think you basically have to stand up to the problem. You can't stand up to it by trading off one part against the other.