Thursday, July 2, 2015

Eye on Iran: Iran Nuclear Talks Could Stall Over Access to Scientists and Sites






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NYT: "For more than a decade, the C.I.A. has closely followed the workings of one Iranian officer and his sprawling nuclear empire: Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, the relentless driving force behind what Western intelligence agencies say was Iran's Manhattan Project, its effort to design a compact nuclear weapon that could fit atop a missile. Now, in the final push for a comprehensive nuclear agreement with Iran, accounting for the accomplishments of Mr. Fakhrizadeh and his team of university scientists, missile engineers and military officers is emerging as one of the last and most formidable obstacles - perhaps on a par with the question of whether inspectors will be able, on short notice, to step into any place they suspect might conceal bomb-related work. The chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Yukiya Amano, is flying into Tehran on Thursday to meet with President Hassan Rouhani and Iran's top national security officials in the latest effort to agree on a plan for interviewing scientists, examining their documents and visiting a long list of places where the agency believes they conducted nuclear-related experiments. It is the third such effort by the agency since 2007 to come up with a plan to inspect what agency officials delicately call the 'possible military dimensions' of Iran's nuclear program. Over the next few days, the fate of the biggest diplomatic gamble of the Obama presidency may hinge on the freedom of Mr. Amano's small, overburdened teams of inspectors to investigate evidence about past activity and pursue any suspicions - including those about activities on military bases - as questions come up... 'We don't need a confession,' one of Mr. Kerry's colleagues, who, like other officials interviewed, requested anonymity to discuss negotiations, said recently. 'But we also can't set precedent that you can ignore nuclear inspectors for years and get away from it." http://t.uani.com/1JBbG2u

WSJ: "With few signs that the talks are close to wrapping up, Mr. Zarif questioned on Wednesday whether July 7 was really a final and achievable deadline... The U.S. and other western officials are eager to avoid talks dragging past that date because it would give Congress an extra 30 days to review the agreement before voting on it. However, Mr. Zarif said 'we did not set any deadline.' On Wednesday, White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest pushed back hard against that suggestion. 'We've been engaged in these negotiations for almost two years now and the United States and our P5+1 partners have had ample opportunity to work through with Iran the wide-range of very complex issues that are involved in these negotiations. So this is a deadline that certainly the United States and our P5+1 partners take very seriously,' he said. 'All indications are that the Iranians take the deadline very seriously as well.'" http://t.uani.com/1LKjUZn

Reuters: "Iran's stockpile of low-enriched uranium gas dropped below the maximum level required under a 2013 interim nuclear agreement with world powers, a U.N. report showed, but a U.S. think-tank suggested Tehran had not entirely met its obligations. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said in its monthly report on Iran, a confidential document seen by Reuters on Wednesday, that Iran's stockpile of uranium gas enriched up to a fissile purity of 5 percent was at 7,537 kg at end-June - below a roughly 7,650 kg ceiling stipulated in the November 2013 interim nuclear deal with six world powers. A U.S.-based think-tank, however, issued an analysis of the IAEA report that questioned whether Iran had indeed complied with the requirement to convert its low enriched uranium (LEU) to a form with less risk of proliferation, uranium dioxide. 'The IAEA's recent report on the implementation of (the interim deal) shows that only 9 percent of Iran's stockpile of newly produced LEU hexafluoride has actually been converted into uranium dioxide form,' the Institute for Science and International Security said in a press release. 'When it became clear that Iran could not meet its commitment to convert the LEU into uranium dioxide, the United States revised its criteria for Iran meeting its obligations,' the institute said, adding that the LEU had apparently been converted into a form different from uranium dioxide." http://t.uani.com/1GZsdMF

   
Nuclear Program & Negotiations

Reuters: "Their inability to detect clandestine atomic programs in Iraq and North Korea shadows Western officials as they seek to curb Iran's known nuclear activities and keep it from pursuing others in secret... 'I fail to see how any agreement can pass muster ... that doesn't have snap inspections (at all sites),' former U.S. deputy secretary of State Richard Armitage told Reuters. 'I don't see how you can have a verifiable regime without having snap inspections - whenever, wherever.' ... The experience of Iraq after the 1991 Gulf war is an example of the limits the nonproliferation system that then existed. While combing through the country after a U.S.-led coalition drove Iraqi forces out of Kuwait in 1991, U.N. arms control inspectors found that Baghdad had been pursuing a secret uranium enrichment program that it had not declared... 'Managed access' is a mechanism to allow the minimum needed IAEA oversight to ensure there is no diversion to clandestine nuclear or nuclear-related activities while limiting IAEA access to protect a nation's legitimate military or industrial secrets. However, there is no time limit on such negotiations, allowing the state to drag the talks out forever if it wished. 'If they cannot come to an agreement, that discussion - that negotiation - can go on ad infinitum,' a senior U.S. official said. 'We have added a procedure in this agreement that will ensure that that discussion comes to an end,' the official added, declining to comment on how quickly that would happen." http://t.uani.com/1GQM528

Reuters: "Nuclear talks between Tehran and world powers had yet to reach a breakthrough as they continued in overtime on Thursday, and Western officials said the latest red lines by Iran's supreme leader had made it hard to settle disputes on key issues... Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, who have been holding intense talks in Vienna, were to be joined on Thursday by the foreign ministers of Britain, France, Germany and China. Britain's Philip Hammond told reporters on his arrival that an agreement was not yet at hand. 'The work goes on. You are going to see ministers coming and going to maintain the momentum of these discussions. I don't think we're at any kind of breakthrough moment yet and we will do whatever we need to do to keep the momentum,' Hammond said... 'Substantial differences still remain even at this last stage,' a Western diplomat told Reuters. 'The positions set out by Khamenei last week make it more difficult to bridge the gaps in the next few days and there is still work to be done.'" http://t.uani.com/1LKrcw7

NYT: "In Vienna, Mohammad Javad Zarif, Iran's foreign minister, said that Iran had invited Mr. Amano to travel to Tehran. 'We invited Mr. Amano to go to Iran to work with our officials on how to proceed,' Mr. Zarif said as the start of a meeting with Secretary of State John Kerry and other senior American officials... Iran is eager to address the issue of the so-called possible military dimensions of its nuclear program, an unnamed Iranian diplomat told the website Alef.ir on Wednesday... 'We believe the topic of possible military dimension can be solved without accessing the militarily sites,' the Iranian diplomat said. http://t.uani.com/1IvADO3

Press TV (Iran): "Sticking points still remain between Iran and the P5+1 group of countries in drafting the text of a final deal over Tehran's nuclear program, says senior Iranian nuclear negotiator Abbas Araqchi. 'There remain issues of difference on which no agreement has been reached yet, and there are certain texts which have not been written down yet. In fact, we are working on them round the clock,' Araqchi said on Wednesday... Stressing that Iran will not accept an agreement at any price, the senior negotiator said that a good deal should respect Iran's principles and red lines. 'An agreement should be a good one and a good agreement is the one that complies with the principles, frameworks and red lines set especially by the Leader [of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei] and in that case we will agree to a deal,' he said. Araqchi said that Iran prefers a good agreement to time, adding that Tehran will not be bound by time in striking a final deal with six world powers." http://t.uani.com/1FS8uKA

Free Beacon: "Bowing to Iran's pursuit of nuclear capability will make it harder to enforce America's longstanding policy of non-proliferation among enemies and allies alike, according to several foreign policy experts speaking at the Heritage Foundation on Tuesday. Experts warned that proliferation would grow more difficult to control in the coming years, saying that America is no longer in a position to police nuclear development around the world. 'The fundamental problem is that we're giving ground on what has been a principle of U.S. non proliferation policy for 70 years, which is the spread of enrichment and reprocessing to any country, even our allies, as a problem. And what this Iran deal does is make an exception, not just for any country, but for Iran, a country that's continually cheating on its agreements. So in the wake of the deal, I think it becomes very hard for us to go to our allies and say, we trust Tehran with this technology, but we don't trust you,' said Matthew Kroenig, an associate professor at Georgetown University." http://t.uani.com/1CN7esi

Congressional Action

The Hill: "Congressional Republicans are pressuring the Obama administration to take a firm line with Iran in the final stretch of the nuclear talks... Republicans say they fear the Obama administration will concede too much to Iran and are drawing their own redlines for what would be an acceptable agreement. In particular, they are zeroing in on demands that Iran allow inspections anytime, anywhere, including at military sites, and that the country come clean on any past nuclear weapons research. Republicans also say Iran should agree to phased-in sanctions relief... Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), a 2016 presidential candidate, blasted reports that a senior administration official told reporters that the U.S. wouldn't insist upon access to Iranian military sites, because the U.S. would not allow for others to do the same. 'There is no place in this negotiation for moral equivalence, they said in a statement. Iran must be held to different, more rigorous standards. House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ed Royce (R-Calif.) added, 'It's logical that any deal with a nuclear pariah and state sponsor of terrorism must require exceptional access for international inspectors.' Stop explaining Iran's position, and certainly don't do it by comparing Iran with the U.S. in any way, shape, or form. The standard needs to be go anywhere, anytime - not go some places, sometimes,' he said." http://t.uani.com/1NzhGKq

Sanctions Relief

Free Beacon: "Iranian officials said Monday that the Islamic Republic's Central Bank has successfully repatriated 13 tons of gold as part of a package of sanctions relief provided to Iran by U.S. and Western powers. The gold was transferred to Iran by the government of South Africa, which had been holding onto the assets due to harsh sanctions meant to pressure Tehran to rein in its rogue nuclear program. The gold appears to have been released as part of a sanctions relief package that will have awarded Iran nearly $12 billion in unfrozen cash assets by the time negotiations wrap up next week. Iran received $4.2 billion in unfrozen assets under the 2013 interim agreement with the United States and was then given another $2.8 billion by the Obama administration last year in a bid to keep Tehran committed to the talks." http://t.uani.com/1Kvb8xV

WSJ: "Iran's oil biggest shipping company has amassed the world's largest fleet of super tankers and is in talks to sail back into western waters should the Islamic Republic strike a nuclear deal, according to senior officials. NITC, the privatized Iranian shipping company, says it has 42 very large crude carriers, known as VLCCs, after buying 20 such China-built vessels in the past 2½ years. It is the first time the company has disclosed the size of its VLCC fleet which it expanded as sanctions cut off access to European-insured vessels, 'No other company in the world owns that number of VLCCs,' said Capt. Nasrollah Sardashti, NITC's commercial director, in an interview in the Iranian capital. VLCCs can carry 2 million barrels of oil each...  Ali Akbar Safaei, the managing director of the NITC, said in an interview that the company is in talks with insurance companies that are part of London's Protection & Indemnity-a form of oil-shipping insurance coverage that pools insurers' resources to cover high risks-as the company seeks to speed up its return to Europe. 'We have resumed our connections with partners in the maritime field' in the EU, he said. 'All conditions are there to call at European ports' when sanctions are lifted. Mr. Safaei also mentioned contacts with European safety-rating agencies, shipping logistics agencies and finance houses." http://t.uani.com/1GR0bzv

Fars (Iran): "The Islamic Republic of Iran Railways Company and a French company on Wednesday signed a contract to develop railway stations in the three Iranian cities of Tehran, Mashhad and Qom... The contract also includes locating and designing of Tehran's high-speed railway as the first step to launch similar railway systems in other cities. The Islamic Republic of Iran Railways Company and the French AREP company endorsed the contract which also envisages optimizing and modernizing the Tehran railway station's area. Similar plans are also due to be implemented in Mashhad and Qom cities." http://t.uani.com/1CKxqE4

AzerNews: "German petrochemical company is taking measures to convey the technology to Iran while the sanctions on the Islamic Republic are still valid. The experts from the Basell Polyolefine GmbH have even traveled to Iran and visited some petrochemical projects in Asaluyeh, southern Iran, IRNA reported. The sides held several talks with Iranian petrochemical officials and plan to transfer the technology. The project is said to be worth $300 million... Basell Polyolefine GmbH produces and markets polyolefins in Germany. Its products are used to manufacture films, cable and pipe coatings, fuel tanks, injection moldings, and household articles. The company operates as a subsidiary of LyondellBasell Industries N.V." http://t.uani.com/1H0xzHt

Reuters: "For April-June, India's first fiscal quarter and the first three months of annual contracts with Iran, India shipped in nearly 50 percent more oil from Tehran at 306,000 bpd compared with the same period last year, the data showed." http://t.uani.com/1CNco7J

Extremism

Haaretz: "Throughout 2014, Iran continued to block a website that provides information on the Holocaust and Jewish-Muslim relations, the U.S. State Department said Thursday. In its annual report on human rights, the State Department said Iran's government kept blocking the Persian-language website of the Aladdin Project, a foreign-based non-governmental organization. In November 2013, the report said, Iran's Fars News Agency published an article describing the website as a creation of 'international Zionism' that sought 'to recognize the Zionists' fabricated narrative about the Holocaust, which will enable them to present the creation of [Israel] as both legitimate and necessary. Questions over the history and uniqueness of the Holocaust continued into 2014, according to the report... In a national address to mark the Persian New Year in March, Supreme Leader [Ayatollah Ali] Khamenei asserted that the historical reality of the Holocaust was unknown and questioned if it actually did happen." http://t.uani.com/1CNarIy

Foreign Affairs

Reuters: "Cut off from Yemen and its allies there by a Saudi-led military campaign, Iran has intensified a media counter-offensive against Riyadh, accusing its regional rival of inflicting catastrophic suffering while presenting itself as a blameless peacemaker. Iranian state media have given blanket coverage in Arabic, Farsi and English to the three-month-old war in Yemen, where Saudi Arabia and Sunni Arab allies have been bombing the Iranian-allied Houthi faction for over three months... In its latest broadside, the hardline Fars news agency on Wednesday released a video clip showing the face of Saudi King Salman morphing into that of Saddam Hussein, the late Iraqi dictator loathed in Tehran as its enemy in a 1980-88 war, interspersed with scenes of crying Yemeni children. Another tactic was a state-sponsored cartoon contest about the Yemen war -- even as an Iranian court sentenced an activist to more than 12 years in jail on charges including drawing cartoons of Iranian lawmakers." http://t.uani.com/1IRzEDM

Opinion & Analysis

Thomas Friedman in NYT: "Sometime after the 1973 war, I remember seeing a cartoon that showed President Anwar el-Sadat lying flat on his back in a boxing ring. The Israeli prime minister, Golda Meir, wearing boxing gloves, was standing over him, with Sadat saying to Meir something like, 'I want the trophy, I want the prize money, I want the belt.' I've been thinking of that cartoon a lot lately as I listen to Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, lecturing the United States and its five great power partners on his terms for concluding a deal that would restrict Iran's ability to develop a nuclear weapon for 10 to 15 years in return for lifting sanctions. But in that draft deal Khamenei has managed to preserve Iran's basic nuclear infrastructure, albeit curbed, and has continually insisted that Iran will not allow international inspections of military sites suspected of harboring covert nuclear programs. It's still not clear if the last remaining obstacles to a deal will be resolved. But it is stunning to me how well the Iranians, sitting alone on their side of the table, have played a weak hand against the United States, Russia, China, France, Germany and Britain on their side of the table. When the time comes, I'm hiring Ali Khamenei to sell my house. You'd never know that 'Iran is the one hemorrhaging hundreds of billions of dollars due to sanctions, tens of billions because of fallen oil prices and billions sustaining the Assad regime in Syria,' said Karim Sadjadpour, an Iran expert at the Carnegie Endowment. And 'it's Ali Khamenei, not John Kerry, who presides over a population desperate to see sanctions relief.' Yet, for the past year every time there is a sticking point - like whether Iran should have to ship its enriched uranium out of the country or account for its previous nuclear bomb-making activities - it keeps feeling as if it's always our side looking to accommodate Iran's needs. I wish we had walked out just once. When you signal to the guy on the other side of the table that you're not willing to either blow him up or blow him off - to get up and walk away - you reduce yourself to just an equal and get the best bad deal nonviolence can buy. Diplomatic negotiations in the end always reflect the balance of power, notes the Johns Hopkins University foreign policy specialist Michael Mandelbaum, writing in The American Interest. 'In the current negotiations ... the United States is far stronger than Iran, yet it is the United States that has made major concessions. After beginning the negotiations by insisting that the Tehran regime relinquish all its suspect enrichment facilities and cease all its nuclear activities relevant to making a bomb, the Obama administration has ended by permitting Iran to keep virtually all of those facilities and continue some of those activities.' How did this happen? 'Part of the explanation may lie in Barack Obama's personal faith in the transformative power of exposure to the global economy.' But, adds Mandelbaum, 'Surely the main reason ... is that, while there is a vast disparity in power between the two parties, the United States is not willing to use the ultimate form of power and the Iranian leaders know this.' ... This deal could be as big, if not bigger, an earthquake in the Middle East as the U.S. invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. And what both had in common is that we were totally unprepared to manage the aftershocks the morning after. The Arab world today has almost no geopolitical weight. Egypt is enfeebled, Saudi Arabia lacks the capacity to project power and Iraq is no more. An Iran that is unshackled from sanctions and gets an injection of over $100 billion in cash will be even more superior in power than all of its Arab neighbors. Therefore, the U.S. needs to take the lead in initiating a modus vivendi between Sunni Arabs and Persian Shiites and curb Iran's belligerence toward Israel. If we can't help defuse those conflicts, a good bad deal could very easily fuel a wider regional war." http://t.uani.com/1CN9oYR

Bobby Ghosh in Quartz: "Something fascinating just came over the transom from Tehran: In an interview to the state-owned news service IRNA, president Hassan Rouhani threatened that 'if the other side breaches the deal, we will go back to the old path, stronger than what they can imagine.' We can set aside the belligerent tone here: Bluster and bullying have long been the Tehran regime's stock-in-trade. But it's worth spending a few minutes parsing Rouhani's words. The 'other side' is the collection of world powers, known as the P5+1, that are currently negotiating with Iran over its nuclear program. (They've just extended the deadline by a week, to July 7.) The 'deal' is a long-sought bargain that would allow the regime in Tehran to pursue peaceful nuclear technology while the world lifts economic sanctions on Iran. But what, pray, is 'the old path' along which the cleric-president is threatening to take his country? Since its secret nuclear plant in Natanz was revealed in 2002, the Iranian regime has sworn, over and over again, that it has never pursued nuclear weapons. Among other things, the country's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has said that nuclear weapons are 'un-Islamic,' and therefore taboo for the Islamic Republic. If we're to believe the regime's claim, then Rouhani's threat makes no sense. The 'old path' would simply be more 'peaceful' nuclear research, allowing the sanctions to continue devastating the Iranian economy. That's not so much a threat as a flagellant's cry for help: 'If you go back on your word, I'll hurt myself.' It's possible Rouhani is merely bluffing: There's no 'old path,' and Tehran is simply trying to frighten the P5+1 into relenting on the remaining sticking points at the negotiating table in Vienna. (To his critics, president Barack Obama's claim that the US will walk away from negotiations if it doesn't get a good deal smacks of bluff, too.) The alternative is that Rouhani has unwittingly revealed that Iran was indeed pursuing nukes. That would be a real threat, especially if he is also sincere in pursuing this path 'stronger than what they can imagine.'" http://t.uani.com/1LFMXw2

Rep. Kevin McCarthy in WashPost: "When former advisers to President Obama contribute to an open, bipartisan letter outlining their collective concerns that the nuclear deal the administration is negotiating with Iran would fall very short of its own standard of a 'good' agreement, something is wrong. And they aren't the only ones who are nervous. Now that the deadline for the negotiations has passed, Obama should ignore the rhetoric that his legacy depends on an agreement and be prepared to reject a bad deal. Decades ago, Ronald Reagan was faced with a similar dilemma in talks with the Soviet Union at Reykjavik, Iceland. Despite knowing that any agreement with the Russians would earn broad praise, Reagan walked away, only to come back to the table later and secure a better deal. Reagan understood that peace without freedom is meaningless and that knowing when to walk away from the negotiation table is just as important as knowing when to sit down. Recent reports on the status of nuclear negotiations, combined with statements from senior Obama administration officials, give serious cause for three main areas of concern. These include the administration's apparent willingness to allow Iran to keep its past military nuclear work secret, the potential lifting of sanctions not tied to Iran's nuclear program and U.S. negotiators' apparent lack of insistence on vigorous inspections as part of an eventual deal. All three reflect this administration's unbridled quest for an agreement. But all three would guarantee a bad deal. Only two months ago, Secretary of State John F. Kerry told PBS that the Iranian regime would absolutely have to account for potential previous nuclear weaponization activities if there's going to be a deal. Iran's suspected past work toward military-grade weapons undermines claims that it is pursuing a peaceful, civilian nuclear program. There is no way to accurately gauge the status of Iran's nuclear capability without knowing what it has been hiding all these years. Considering that the history of Iran's nuclear program is replete with efforts to obfuscate and deceive, the onus is on Iran to prove that it has nothing to hide. That hasn't happened - but we must insist on it. But U.S. negotiators aren't insisting. Kerry said recently that 'we're not fixated on Iran specifically accounting for what they did at one point in time or another.' These wild vacillations only spur congressional concern over the direction of the negotiations... A bad deal would also take the Iranian regime at its word that it isn't cheating on its nuclear commitments. International inspectors must have 'anywhere, anytime' access to the Iranian sites they need to visit, including military and other sensitive facilities. The United States should not grant Iran veto power over international inspectors. The Iranian regime's refusal to submit to intrusive inspections would be a telling indicator that it intends to continue its deception... The words of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei have done little to dispel this notion. Khamenei has vowed to reject allowing international inspectors to visit Iran's military sites or interviewing nuclear scientists. Iran's Parliament agreed - passing legislation that bans these types of inspections as part of any eventual deal. As negotiations continue, Congress stands ready to stand up for core U.S. national security interests - and against a bad deal with Iran. Hopefully, President Obama will see the wisdom in President Reagan's example." http://t.uani.com/1RTWj71

Michael Oren in CNN: "If you scan the headlines, you may have seen that I've written a new book, 'Ally: My Journey Across the American-Israeli Divide.' Clearly, it has touched a nerve. This is hardly surprising. The book is out precisely when the United States looks poised to sign a nuclear deal with Iran -- a deal that is bad for Israel, bad for America and bad for the world. For Israel, Iran's nuclear program poses not one, but several existential threats. The first and most obvious is that Iran will develop nuclear warheads and will place them atop one of the many intercontinental ballistic missiles it has built, missiles whose sole purpose is to carry such warheads. Israel, according to the 'moderate' former Iranian leader Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, is 'a one-bomb country.' The second threat derives from the fact that Iran is the world's largest state sponsor of terror, backing attacks against Israeli civilians and Jews across five continents and in dozens of cities. If Iran acquires nuclear capabilities, so too will the terrorists, who will not need an ICBM to deliver their weapon, but only a ship container. Lastly, but no less nightmarishly, once Iran acquires nuclear capabilities, so too will many of the countries in the Middle East, transforming an already unstable region into a nuclear powder keg. For Israelis, the Iranian nuclear issue is not about legacy, but our children's lives. However, the Iranian nuclear program threatens not only Israel and the Middle East, but also America and the world. Iranian proxies are second only to al Qaeda in the number of Americans they have killed in recent years. This is the same regime that took over the U.S. Embassy and took its staff hostage in 1979, that was responsible for the attacks on the U.S. Embassy and Marine barracks in Beirut in 1983 and the Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia in 1996. In 2011, as the U.S. attorney general noted, it even endorsed a plot to blow up a crowded popular restaurant in Washington. In the short run, perhaps, America can at least gamble on whether the Iranian regime is rational and a potentially responsible regional actor. But what if Israel's estimation is correct -- that the Iranian regime is irrational and will devote tens of billions of dollars in sanctions relief not to peaceful development, but to enhancing its global terrorist networks? Well-intentioned advocates of the proposed Iranian nuclear deal, the deadline for which has been pushed back to July 7, will argue that it provides for intrusive inspections of Iranian nuclear facilities, will remove a large portion of Iran's stockpile of enriched uranium, and, for a 10-year period, will prevent Iran from producing a nuclear weapon in less than 12 months. Yet other experts -- including leading American scientists -- have concluded that, under this agreement, Iran could break out military nuclear power in a far shorter period and could develop the wherewithal to create not just one bomb, but an atomic arsenal. In the interim, the agreement will also bestow legitimacy on an Iran that is attempting to overthrow pro-American governments throughout the Middle East, such as Saudi Arabia and Yemen, and is propping up the Syrian dictator who has killed many tens of thousands of his own citizens. The regime seeks to extend its hegemony throughout the region and beyond." http://t.uani.com/1H3x7YW
         

Eye on Iran is a periodic news summary from United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) a program of the American Coalition Against Nuclear Iran, Inc., a tax-exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Eye on Iran is not intended as a comprehensive media clips summary but rather a selection of media elements with discreet analysis in a PDA friendly format. For more information please email Press@UnitedAgainstNuclearIran.com

United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) is a non-partisan, broad-based coalition that is united in a commitment to prevent Iran from fulfilling its ambition to become a regional super-power possessing nuclear weapons.  UANI is an issue-based coalition in which each coalition member will have its own interests as well as the collective goal of advancing an Iran free of nuclear weapons.

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