Map of Iran's highest priority nuclear facilities. This includes the research centers at Tehran and Isfahan/Esfahan (from which Submarine Matters' site-meter picked up Iranian reader interest in computer simulations of nuclear weapon explosions) see below.
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Submarine Matters direct technical monitoring of the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran (AEOI) as far back as 2006 reflects Iran's ongoing interest in nuclear weapons
research as an option for Iran. The AEOI is active in many university institutes, cities and isolated sites in Iran, particularly
in Tehran and Isfahan (aka Esfahan) a large city about 350 km south of Tehran.
The Esfahan/Isfahan University of Technology (IUT) is
closely related to AEOI. IUT includes the Nuclear
Technology Center (INTC). Its estimated 3,000
scientists have many nuclear functions including Uranium
enrichment. INTC operates three small nuclear research reactors supplied by
China.
Like all research communities the Iranian nuclear community uses internet searches for general and specific purposes.
Using my website and a simple, free site-meter, Submarine Matters began to detect and collect some internet searches by employees of Iranian Atomic research institutions.
In 2006 Google revealed to commercial site-meters the words used by readers in keyword searches. By 2016 Google began to disguise the precise keywords.
Like all research communities the Iranian nuclear community uses internet searches for general and specific purposes.
Using my website and a simple, free site-meter, Submarine Matters began to detect and collect some internet searches by employees of Iranian Atomic research institutions.
In 2006 Google revealed to commercial site-meters the words used by readers in keyword searches. By 2016 Google began to disguise the precise keywords.
Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran (AEOI) Employee Google keyword searches detected by Submarine Matters' site-meter include:
- July 21, 2006 (IP 80.191.142.11) "Esfahan", conducted Google search for "deep bunkers MOP" MOP means Massive Ordinance Penetrator (large US bombs [actually used against Iranian targets, including Isfahan, in June 2025] useful for blowing up deep dug high value targets including nuclear facilities)
- October 30, 2006 (IP 217.218.11.165) "Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran" "Tehran" employee googled "what is nuclear simulation". Comment - literally revealing "Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran" as the Iranian ISP is clearly poor security. One can now conclude that 217.218 is an "Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran" IP number even if "Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran" is disguised with bland ISP names.
- November 19, 2006 (IP 217.218.64.202) Atomic Energy Organization of Iran disguised as "Area No 6 Partition" "Tehran", conducted a Google search for "nuclear explosion simulation".
- March 4, 2007 (IP 213.176.127.82) from -
"Iranian Research Organization" employee googled key words "simulation underground nuclear explosion".
- September 9, 2007 (IP 217.218.64.202) Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, employee googled information on "nuclear weapon effects
computer".
- October 23, 2007 (IP 217.218.64.202) Atomic Energy Organization of Iran employee googled information on "nuclear weapon effects computer".
- November 13, 2007 (IP 217.218.64.202) Atomic Energy Organization of Iran employee googled information on "underground nuclear explosion"
- November 22, 2007 (IP 217.219.18.13) a reader from Isfahan/Esfahan University of Technology, Tehran campus, detected as reading information on Submarine Matters concerning "Indian and Pakistani nuclear missiles".
- June 3, 2010 (IP 83.147.213.101) a reader in Isfahan/Esfahan Googled Submarine Matters for information on the SILEX laser uranium enrichment process.
- June 3, 2010 (IP 83.147.213.101) a reader in Isfahan/Esfahan Googled Submarine Matters for information on the SILEX laser uranium enrichment process.
Information collected above on Iranian interest in "nuclear weapon effects computer" prompted me to do further research on supercomputer upgrades at the Isfahan University of Technology. In 2011 the then President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad reportedly unveiled a supercomputer at Isfahan University of Technology - see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isfahan_University_of_Technology#Research_and_facilities .
A supercomputer has many uses including complex physical and chemical reactions that occur in nuclear explosion simulations. Such simulations demand the enormous speed and capacity of supercomputers. By 2011-2012 the Iranians are likely to have conducted nuclear explosion simulations using the supercomputer. More on Iran nuclear - see http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-11927720 and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_facilities_in_Iran
Since 2014 Iran has been at or near nuclear weapon breakout status - with the
three components being:
- substantial stocks of semi-enriched
uranium (LEU or MEU), which could become bomb grade (90+%) HEU within a couple of months
using Iran's thousands of centrifuges and possible hidden laser enrichment
capability.
- delivery means - in the form of Sejjil http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sejjil solid fuel IRBM and the Shahab series liquid fueled IRBMs, and
- enough nuclear device plans and components
acquired from Pakistan's A. Q. Khan network to have constructed crude fission
devices (minus the HEU and/or Plutonium explosive) around 2006.
SAUDI NUCLEAR PROGRAM?
Iran has been building a nuclear weapon program because regional opponent, Israel, has developed nuclear weapons since the mid 1960s.
Shiite Iran's Sunni opponent Saudi Arabia has had the potential political and financial muscle to buy nuclear weapons and missiles from Pakistan and China since the 1980s. The Saudis bought Chinese inaccurate-hence-nuclear-specific-use CSS-2 IRBMs in 1987. The Saudi's also reportedly bought from China more advanced nuclear-use DF-21 (CSS-5) MRBMs in 2007. See the Newsweek article and http://www.nti.org/gsn/article/us-backed-secret-saudi-missile-purchase-china/.


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