
In his June 4 speech, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei went beyond merely rejecting the latest U.S. nuclear proposal. He delivered an elaborate defense of why he believes Iran must not restrict its uranium enrichment activities. However, his arguments—centered on the supposed scientific and strategic value of the nuclear program—are riddled with contradictions, flawed logic, and misleading claims.
Khamenei’s remarks focused on two central themes:
- The importance of the nuclear industry
- The necessity of domestic uranium enrichment
He claimed that the nuclear industry is not just about generating electricity but also has applications in medicine, agriculture, aerospace, and precision technology. Still, his portrayal of the industry’s value and his insistence on enrichment as essential are fraught with inconsistencies.
Is Nuclear Technology a “Mother Industry”?
Khamenei declared:
“The nuclear industry is a mother industry. Numerous scientific fields are influenced by it—fields such as advanced technologies, including medical equipment, aerospace, precision sensors, and electronics. These are all connected to and influenced by nuclear science. Basic sciences and engineering fields like nuclear physics, energy engineering, materials engineering, and medical and pharmaceutical applications in both diagnosis and treatment—all are affected by the nuclear industry. In agriculture and environmental industries, there are numerous areas dependent on or influenced by nuclear technology. It is a mother industry.”
In development economics, a “mother industry” is one that forms the backbone of an economy—industries like steel, petrochemicals, and electricity, which supply essential inputs and infrastructure for other sectors. While nuclear technology does have critical applications in medicine, power, aerospace, and research, it is not foundational to a nation’s industrial ecosystem in the way that steel or energy is.
No advanced economy classifies nuclear technology as a mother industry. It remains a specialized, high-tech field with limited applicability across broad industrial domains.
Is Nuclear Power Truly “Clean Energy”?
Khamenei also claimed that the nuclear industry provides “clean energy.” Yet in modern energy discourse, “clean energy” refers primarily to renewables such as wind and solar—sources that are sustainable and pose minimal environmental risks. Nuclear energy, due to its radioactive waste and accident potential, is not classified as clean.
Germany, for instance, has phased out all of its nuclear power plants for precisely these reasons. Moreover, nuclear energy is expensive. Generating electricity from nuclear power costs around $190 per megawatt-hour, while solar costs up to $95 and wind just $75.
Is the Industry “Useless” Without Enrichment?
Khamenei stated:
“This massive nuclear industry is useless without the ability to enrich uranium.”
This statement flatly contradicts his earlier claim that the industry has wide applications—in medicine, agriculture, engineering, and research. Most of these uses do not require uranium enrichment, especially not domestic enrichment. Radioisotope production, seed treatment, medical equipment sterilization, and nuclear research can all be conducted without local enrichment facilities.
If other nations benefit from these uses without enrichment, how can Khamenei assert that the industry is “useless” without it?
Which Countries Have Nuclear Programs Without Enrichment?
Many developed countries operate sophisticated nuclear programs without uranium enrichment. These include Canada, Sweden, Switzerland, Finland, Australia, Belgium, and South Korea.
South Korea, for instance, produces hundreds of medical radioisotopes, imports nuclear fuel from sources outside the U.S.,
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