Let me start with the second part, which is simpler. On the spelling, it is K-a-l-a N-a-f-t, and it has a branch in Calgary. As for the details, I will be happy to liaise separately with you and pass them on, including the information the European Union has in its hands about the role this company is playing in illegal procurement.
When it comes to the evidence and the timeline, I just want to say a quick word about the timeline. I do not have access to privileged intelligence of the kind the President of the United States hopefully sees every morning. I suspect that the honourable members of the committee don't either. Most people in the western world don't have access. So we cannot determine the timeline very accurately. Also, this is a very complicated process that is very dynamic, and it is a process that countries concerned about its consequences constantly try to disrupt. So when high-placed officials tell you that Iran is six months or six years away from having nuclear weapons, take those assessments with a grain of salt, because even the most informed people in the business do not have the exact, precise, accurate timeline down to the last month or day.
Having said that, we have enough information from open sources--I'm talking as an ordinary citizen and not as somebody who is privy to classified information--to know that Iran has made tremendous progress moving forward toward the finish line. The evidence available from open sources is something that should concern us tremendously.
I just want to mention a few things that emerge from documents such as the reports of the International Atomic Energy Agency. First, Iran has aggressively sought enrichment and the mastery of the nuclear cycle. Before building the kind of nuclear power plants that would benefit from the fuel produced, the usual sequence in the history of nuclear energy for civilian purposes is the opposite: countries develop the nuclear power plants, and then eventually, and not necessarily, learn how to enrich uranium. Oftentimes it is supplied by the supplier groups.
The second point it that Iran has aggressively sought to enrich uranium. The only nuclear power plant Iran has today, which is not functional yet, is the one in Bushehr. The uranium fuel would be supplied by Russia, so it doesn't need to do that. Iran has also developed a facility in Iraq, which was one of the clandestine facilities exposed in 2002, that is a heavy water reactor, very likely designed to produce plutonium for weapons. Iran to this very day denies access to that facility by International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors.
Iran has concealed its nuclear program for 18 years, which in and of itself is an indication that Iran has much to explain. Iran has conducted a number of experiments and activities that can only be explained in the context of a military program, including experiments with high explosives that are typically used to trigger a nuclear chain reaction in a device. It has experimented on specific, very special kinds of triggers that are typical of nuclear weapons. It has sought the plans and technology and has experimented with milling uranium metal and shaping it in the form of hemispheres, which can only be used in nuclear weapons. All of this is documented, let alone the fact that much of the technology Iran achieved originally for its nuclear power comes from the illicit nuclear network run by the Pakistani scientist and father of the Pakistani bomb, Abdul Qadeer Khan. We know a lot of things about the nuclear program in Iran from that source, which further confirms the concern that this program has military dimensions.
Finally, most of the industries, companies, and research centres that are involved in the nuclear program--including the ones that produce centrifuges for the Iranian nuclear program--are either military or directly run by the Revolutionary Guards. Again, it's one further point about how difficult it is to say that Iran is pursuing nuclear power only for civilian purposes, given the heavy involvement of the military sector.
One last example is one of the recent reports by the IAEA, in which it emerged that one of the scientists working for one of these military centres has actually conducted studies about the Trinity test and the effect of the shock wave caused by the plutonium bomb that the Americans exploded in the New Mexico desert on July 16, 1945. When Iran was asked by the IAEA to explain this fact, the answer it gave was that this was a private hobby of the scientist in question. It then denied access for an interview of the scientist.
The evidence available in the public sphere is overwhelming. Only those who do not wish to recognize the harsh reality that a nuclear military program in the hands of Iran constitutes insist on accepting the Iranian version, that this is only for civilian purposes.