Monday, March 30, 2015

Eye on Iran: Iran Backs Away From Key Detail in Nuclear Deal








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NYT: "With a negotiating deadline just two days away, Iranian officials on Sunday backed away from a critical element of a proposed nuclear agreement, saying they are no longer willing to ship their atomic fuel out of the country. For months, Iran tentatively agreed that it would send a large portion of its stockpile of uranium to Russia, where it would not be accessible for use in any future weapons program. But on Sunday Iran's deputy foreign minister made a surprise comment to Iranian reporters, ruling out an agreement that involved giving up a stockpile that Iran has spent years and billions of dollars to amass. 'The export of stocks of enriched uranium is not in our program, and we do not intend sending them abroad,' the official, Abbas Araqchi, told the Iranian media, according to Agence France-Presse. 'There is no question of sending the stocks abroad.' Western officials confirmed that Iran was balking at shipping the fuel out, but insisted that there were other ways of dealing with the material. Chief among those options, they said, was blending it into a more diluted form... Ray Takeyh, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations who has been critical of the emerging accord, said the development raised serious questions about a possible deal. 'The viability of this agreement as a reliable arms control accord is diminished by this,' Mr. Takeyh said. 'One of the core administration arguments has been that the uranium would be shipped abroad as a confidence building measure.'" http://t.uani.com/1BJ7Dv3

Reuters: "The foreign ministers of Iran and six world powers met on Monday in a final push for a preliminary nuclear accord less than two days before their deadline as Tehran showed signs of backing away from previous compromise offers... Officials at the talks in the Swiss city of Lausanne said attempts to reach a framework accord could yet fall apart. A Western diplomat said there are three major sticking points that must be resolved if Iran and major powers are to secure a framework deal before a self-imposed end-March deadline and it is unclear whether those differences will be bridged. The diplomat said the most difficult issues were related to the duration of any limits on Iranian enrichment and research and development activities after an initial 10 years, the lifting of U.N. sanctions and restoring them in case of non-compliance by Iran... Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov's spokeswoman said he was returning to Moscow later on Monday though officials said he would return to Switzerland if there was something to announce... Despite deep disagreements on several points, Western officials said the two sides had previously been closing in on a preliminary deal that could be summarized in a brief document which may or may not be released. Officials said the talks could run at least until the deadline of midnight on Tuesday or beyond. If there was a deal in Lausanne, the parties might move to Geneva for a ceremony." http://t.uani.com/19An014

WSJ: "As negotiations with Iran on a nuclear deal come down to the wire, the White House is ramping up a yearlong campaign to persuade lawmakers and the public to support an agreement. In recent days, officials have tried to neutralize skeptical Democrats by arguing that opposing President Barack Obama would empower the new Republican majority, according to people familiar with the discussions. Meanwhile, the Obama administration has lined up Republicans to try to tamp down a likely political battle over any deal with Iran and scientists to defend an agreement on its technical merits. Perhaps most significant, White House officials have begun to express privately a willingness to accept legislation that gives Congress some oversight of the nuclear deal if talks in the Swiss city of Lausanne result in agreement on the main outlines of a final nuclear deal before Tuesday night's deadline... White House officials still oppose legislation that would give Congress final approval of a deal with Iran or apply new sanctions. And officials don't want lawmakers to vote on any Iran deal until after the June 30 deadline for a comprehensive agreement. But widespread opposition from lawmakers in both parties has forced the White House to begin considering a potential compromise with Congress if that helps Mr. Obama achieve his top foreign policy goal, officials said." http://t.uani.com/1G1vr3Q 

   
Nuclear Program & Negotiations

Reuters: "Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned on Sunday the framework Iranian nuclear agreement being sought by international negotiators, saying it was even worse than his country had feared... 'This deal, as it appears to be emerging, bears out all of our fears, and even more than that,' Netanyahu told his cabinet in Jerusalem as the United States, five other world powers and Iran worked toward a March 31 deadline in Lausanne, Switzerland. Noting advances made by Iranian-allied forces in Yemen and other Arab countries, Netanyahu accused the Islamic republic of trying to 'conquer the entire Middle East' while moving toward nuclearization. 'The Iran-Lausanne-Yemen axis is very dangerous to humanity, and must be stopped,' he said." http://t.uani.com/1BJcDzN

The Hill: "Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) is accusing the Obama administration of moving away from Israel in favor of stronger relations with Iran. He pointed to a range of issues, from the administration's air strikes in Iraq to support Iraqi forces fighting the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, to the tense relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government and the nuclear talks with Iran. Corker said he had concluded the administration wanted to get the United States out of the Middle East. 'As you see what the White House is doing - they're obviously moving away from Israel towards a relationship with Iran,' Corker said during an interview on CNN's 'Wolf.' 'It's very apparent to me that what they're trying to achieve is a balance of power between the Shia sides and the more Sunni-oriented sides, and a way for them to extract themselves out of the Middle East,' Corker said... The Tennessee Republican said he didn't mean to imply the U.S. was completely shifting from the relationship with Israel, but he said he believed the administration's policies would result in giving more influence in the Middle East to Iran. 'I'm not saying totally turning its back, but it's moving more towards an Iranian-dominated relationship to create a balance of power,' Corker said, referring to the Obama administration, when pressed to clarify his remarks on CNN. 'While in a textbook that might be interesting, what you're not seeing from Iran's standpoint is a change in behavior. Just the opposite,' Corker said." http://t.uani.com/1NyIKK5

NYT: "Mr. Moniz, 70, understands his role well: He is providing not only technical expertise but also political cover for Mr. Kerry. If a so-called framework agreement is reached in the next few days, it will be Mr. Moniz who will have to vouch to a suspicious Congress, to Israel and to Arab allies that Iran would be incapable of assembling the raw material for a single nuclear weapon in less than a year. 'It wouldn't mean much coming from Kerry,' said a member of the administration deeply involved in the strategy who spoke on the condition of anonymity. 'The theory is that Ernie's judgment on that matter is unassailable.' ... They have spent much of their time in recent days arguing about the type and power of the advanced centrifuges Iran says it wants to continue developing during the 10 or more years of an agreement - one of the last stumbling blocks in the talks. 'We spend a lot of time on SWU,' Mr. Moniz said, referring to separative work units - the acronym is pronounced 'swoo' in nuclear-speak - which underlie all the calculations about how long it would take Iran to produce a single bomb's worth of enriched uranium... Mr. Moniz has also reached out to his vast network of nuclear scientists in the United States, giving them classified briefings about the details of the talks. His hope is that they will provide technical validation to Congress and nervous allies that the plan negotiated with Tehran will give enough warning time to head off an Iranian race for a nuclear weapon with economic pressure or, if need be, a bombing run." http://t.uani.com/1IfC9k7

Daily Telegraph: "A close media aide to Hassan Rouhani, the Iranian president, has sought political asylum in Switzerland after travelling to Lausanne to cover the nuclear talks between Tehran and the West. Amir Hossein Motaghi, who managed public relations for Mr Rouhani during his 2013 election campaign, was said by Iranian news agencies to have quit his job at the Iran Student Correspondents Association (ISCA). He then appeared on an opposition television channel based in London to say he no longer saw any 'sense' in his profession as a journalist as he could only write what he was told. 'There are a number of people attending on the Iranian side at the negotiations who are said to be journalists reporting on the negotiations,' he told Irane Farda television. 'But they are not journalists and their main job is to make sure that all the news fed back to Iran goes through their channels...  In his television interview, Mr Mottaghi also gave succour to western critics of the proposed nuclear deal, which has seen the White House pursue a more conciliatory line with Tehran than some of America's European allies in the negotiating team, comprising the five permanent members of the UN security council and Germany. 'The US negotiating team are mainly there to speak on Iran's behalf with other members of the 5+1 countries and convince them of a deal,' he said." http://t.uani.com/1xsJvQO

AFP: "Iran and six world powers have reached tentative agreement on key parts of a deal sharply curtailing Tehran's nuclear programme, Western diplomats said Sunday while cautioning that the pact is by no means done. One of these diplomats in talks in Switzerland said Iran had 'more or less' agreed to slash the number of its centrifuge machines by more than two-thirds and to ship abroad most of its stockpile of nuclear material... Iranian diplomats denied that any tentative agreement on these points has been struck, saying that reports of a specific number of centrifuges and exporting its stockpiles were 'journalistic speculation'. 'The fact is that we will conserve a substantial number of centrifuges, that no site will be closed, in particular Fordo. These are the basis of the talks,' the Iranian diplomat said." http://t.uani.com/1ysyZEm

Reuters: "The United States, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China want more than a 10-year suspension of Iran's most sensitive nuclear work. Tehran, which denies it is trying to develop a nuclear weapons capability, is demanding an immediate end to international sanctions that are crippling its economy. A Western diplomat said duration could be traded off if there were real efforts on some key parameters. 'We all want it to be 15 years, but there will be different durations for various aspects of the deal,' the diplomat told reporters. Iranian negotiator Hamid Baidinejad said '15 years is out of question for Iran but 10 years is being discussed.'" http://t.uani.com/1aaI0gd

Fars (Iran): "Director General for Political Affairs at the Iranian Foreign Ministry and nuclear negotiator Hamid Baeidinejad said on Wednesday that the western powers have withdrawn from their previous positions in nuclear talks with Tehran. 'The other side has withdrawn from its positions compared with the past, otherwise we wouldn't have stood at this point and stage in the talks at all,' Baeidinejad told reporters in Tehran on Wednesday." http://t.uani.com/19AiXBM

Sanctions Relief

WashPost: "The headlines in Tehran have been trumpeting some good news for Iran's economy lately. In the first 11 months of the Iranian fiscal year, car production climbed 58 percent and pistachio exports shot up 71 percent. Inflation is high but easing, and after a sharp contraction in 2012 and 2013, the economy is growing again. But the Iranian economy is still a shadow of what it could be if international sanctions were lifted. There is virtually no foreign investment. Unemployment is rampant, especially among the young. Some of the country's banks are in precarious positions. Corruption is common among politically connected groups that profit by circumventing international sanctions. 'The economy is not healthy,' said Djavad Salehi-Isfahani, a professor of economics at Virginia Tech University. 'It is a bit like a sick man whose leg breaks and then the leg is repaired, but the other stuff is still there.'" http://t.uani.com/1CCP2EK

Regional Destabilization

WashPost: "The former head of the Defense Intelligence Agency on Sunday described President Obama's Middle East policy as one of 'willful ignorance,' saying the administration needs a clearer strategy for dealing with conflicts emerging across the region. Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn said during an interview on 'Fox News Sunday' that recent developments in the Middle East are moving in a bad direction for the United States, with Iran 'clearly on the march' to influence events in a 'regional sectarian war.' Critics of the administration have pointed out that the United States appears to be siding with Iranian-backed rebels against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria but opposing such fighters in Yemen. 'At the end of the day, we have just this incredible policy confusion - never mind what our strategy is to execute that policy,' Flynn said. 'We have to stop what we're doing and take a hard look at everything going on the Middle East because it's not going in the right direction.'" http://t.uani.com/1CD34Gw

NYT: "The Arab states said on Sunday that they had agreed to form a combined military force to counter both Iranian influence and Islamist extremism, a gesture many analysts attributed in large part to their drive for more independence from Washington. The agreement came as American and other Western diplomats in Lausanne, Switzerland, were racing to beat a self-imposed deadline of Tuesday to reach a deal with Iran that would restrict its nuclear program in exchange for the removal of economic sanctions. In response, Saudi Arabia and other American allies in the region have made clear that they are seeking to bolster independent regional security measures because they see the proposed accord as a betrayal of Washington's commitment to their security. Regardless of Iran's nuclear program, they complain, the deal would do nothing to stop Iran from seeking to extend its influence around the region by backing favored factions, as it has done in Lebanon, Iraq, Bahrain and Yemen." http://t.uani.com/1xsMtF8

WSJ: "Sunnis across the Middle East greeted the Saudi-led intervention in Yemen as an overdue opportunity to reverse the tide of Iranian-led Shiite influence, an enthusiasm that contrasted starkly with the difficulty the U.S. faced in persuading Arab allies to join a coalition against Sunni extremist group Islamic State. Saudi Arabia assembled a coalition of Sunni states to battle Iranian-linked Houthi rebels in Yemen, inflaming the region's already festering sectarian divides. Nevertheless, it drew an instant outpouring of support from ordinary Sunnis, their political leaders and clerics, and the range of Sunni radical groups. In media coverage, mosque sermons, and social-media postings, the fledgling campaign was hailed as a chance to roll back Iran's reach in places such as Iraq, Lebanon and Syria, as well as Yemen. The excitement reflected how leaderless and fragmented the region's Sunnis have grown over the past decade. 'Iran seeks hegemony, and the Arabs can't tolerate this,' said Amr Moussa, a former Egyptian foreign minister. 'This is a message that enough is enough. Sowing chaos across the Arab world is not acceptable and we can no longer accept this humiliation and fragmentation of our society.'" http://t.uani.com/1CCJr1k

Yemen Crisis

Reuters: "The United States is increasingly concerned about training by Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards for the Houthi rebels in Yemen, where the Shi'ite militias continue to make territorial gains despite airstrikes by neighboring Saudi Arabia. U.S. officials said Tehran's direct involvement with the Houthis was limited but that U.S. intelligence assessments had concluded that Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps personnel were training and equipping Houthi units. The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss security matters, expressed concern that the IRGC's mission could include training the Houthis to use advanced weaponry they acquired after seizing Yemeni military bases. Saudi Arabia, which launched aerial bombardments of Houthi forces this week, has said the militia was receiving extensive backing from Iran, the kingdom's regional rival. 'We see ... Iran playing a large role in supporting the Houthis,' Saudi ambassador to Washington Adel al-Jubeir told reporters on Thursday. 'There are Iranian advisers advising them and Hezbollah operatives advising them,' Jubeir said. Lebanon-based Hezbollah is closely allied with Tehran." http://t.uani.com/1bIZMaR

Human Rights

CBC: "A Toronto-based filmmaker is being held in a notorious Iranian prison, after his family says he was arrested shortly after returning to his home country. Mostafa Azizi, 52, had been a permanent resident in Canada for several years before deciding to return to Iran in January. Soon after he arrived, Azizi was arrested. He is being held in Tehran's Evin prison. Azizi has been charged with insulting Iran's supreme leader and spreading propaganda against the Islamic establishment. His son Arash told CBC News that the specific allegations against his father are unclear, but he said they appear to do with things Azizi posted to social media." http://t.uani.com/1EUwVYc

Opinion & Analysis

UANI Advisory Board Member Olli Heinonen in WINEP: "With reports that Washington and its partners may reach a nuclear accord with Iran in the coming days, a former senior IAEA safeguards official answers the most pressing questions about Tehran's program and how the agreement might affect its capabilities.

What is the commonly accepted definition of 'breakout time'?

This is the time required to produce enough weapons-grade uranium (WGU) for one nuclear weapon. To produce WGU, uranium needs to be enriched (e.g., with centrifuges) to more than 90 percent of its fissile isotope U-235. The amount of WGU required for one weapon is defined by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) as about 27 kg of uranium. This amount is often called a 'significant quantity' (SQ).

What is Iran's current breakout time?

Natural uranium has only 0.7 percent of the isotope U-235, and the effort required to enrich it to one SQ of WGU is about 5,000 Separative Work Units (SWUs). Iran currently has about 9,000 functioning first-generation IR-1 centrifuges, with another 9,000 not in operation. The IR-1s installed in the Natanz and Fordow facilities have been performing at an average per unit rate of 0.75 to 1 SWU per year. Using the 1 SWU/year performance of the latest IR-1 model, the breakout time with 9,000 machines using a natural uranium feed would be six to seven months. However, Iran also has substantial stocks of 3.5 percent enriched uranium hexafluoride (UF6) that can be used as an alternative feed, shrinking the breakout time to three months.

If Iran brought online its other nearly 9,000 IR-1s, breakout time would be about three months with natural uranium feedstock and four to six weeks with 3.5 percent UF6 feedstock. Iran has also developed the more advanced IR-2m centrifuge, rated at 5 SWU/year. If the 1,000 IR-2ms installed at Natanz were used in conjunction with all 18,000 IR-1s, the respective breakout times would be cut by a third.

According to media accounts, the proposed nuclear agreement would lower the number of operating centrifuges to around 6,500. In that circumstance, what would Iran's breakout time be?

Using IR-1s with natural uranium as a feed, the breakout time for 6,500 centrifuges would be about nine months. A crucial question will be how much 3.5 percent enriched UF6 will remain in Iran. Yet even if UF6 stocks are reduced from their current 7.5-8 tons to 500 kg, a breakout time of between seven and eight months would still be possible given the program's enrichment capabilities with natural uranium feed. Since these breakout times are less than the goals set by the U.S. administration, it is important to know what parameters Washington used for its estimates.

The administration says that one of the main achievements of an agreement would be to increase breakout time to at least a year. What else would have to be in the agreement to reach that goal?

The maximum allowed breakout time should be viewed as a combination of detection time and action time -- that is, the time required to get Iran back in compliance with the agreement. Both of these times are difficult to estimate precisely because administrative delays and efforts to resolve disagreements could easily take several months." http://t.uani.com/1EquqSx

UANI Advisory Board Member Olli Heinonen in the Iran Task Force: "P5+1 negotiators are reportedly nearing an agreement with Iran that would dismantle some elements of Iran's nuclear program while only providing limits on all other parts of the program. It also would maintain meaningful parameters that assure-at a minimum-a one-year breakout capability. The Iran Task Force has raised concerns about numerous aspects of the current trajectory of negotiations and the P5+1's concessions to Iran throughout the negotiations. The following memo addresses one such area of concern, namely the 'sunset' of enhanced verification requirements. Although we don't yet know what a final deal will look like, a robust and intrusive verification regime, and in particular the details about the inspections conducted by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), is of utmost importance. And these international verification efforts in Iran cannot simply end when the comprehensive agreement sunsets. Supplementary safeguards measures that extend beyond the Additional Protocol (called AP-plus) are essential if the IAEA is to monitor verifiably a comprehensive nuclear agreement. The IAEA can only return to 'routine' inspections under the AP when the IAEA is certain that all nuclear material and activities in Iran are being used exclusively for peaceful purposes. Since AP-plus access is negotiated by the P5+1, and enforced by a U.N. Security Council (UNSC) resolution, the UNSC also has to conclude that Iran has fully restored its non-proliferation credentials before these supplementary safeguards measures are reduced... Six thousand operating centrifuges is-when looking from a technical perspective, given the known enriched uranium needs of Iran-an excessive and odd number. With current IR-1 centrifuge performance, Iran's 6,000-plus machines could produce annually about two metric tons of low-enriched uranium hexafluoride, that is, 3.5% U-235. However, to fuel the Bushehr reactor for one year, it would take 15 times that amount. At the same time, Iran has secured a long-term agreement to purchase fuel for Bushehr from Russia. Moscow has also offered those services for future Iranian reactors. It would be less expensive for Iran to purchase enriched uranium and nuclear fuel from international markets than to build an enrichment program of the scale needed to fuel Bushehr and future nuclear power plants. On the other hand, if the argument is that Iran needs 6,000 IR-1 centrifuges to produce 20% enriched research reactor fuel, which serves for medical purposes, the number of centrifuges is way too high. Iran may make a patriotic argument for domestic production, but the fact remains that the international market currently supplies the world's needs for enriched uranium required to produce radioisotopes for medical purposes. Both developed and developing countries buy their medical isotopes on the international market because it is easiest and most cost effective. In addition, there is currently a significant excess of highly enriched uranium stocks left over from the Cold War, which can be blended down for reactor fuel for the international market. There really is no need for additional uranium enrichment of 20% U-235 for decades to come. Third, Iran might want enrichment in order to maintain domestic knowledge and skills regarding the front end of the fuel cycle. However, operating 6,000 IR-1 centrifuges is too large for an enrichment demonstration plant, which typically houses some 1,000 centrifuges or half a dozen parallel cascades." http://t.uani.com/1MnImkl

WashPost Editorial: "As the Obama administration pushes to complete an agreement-in-principle with Iran on its nuclear program by Tuesday, it has done little to soothe concerns that it is rushing too quickly to settle, offering too many concessions and ignoring glaring warning signs that Tehran won't abide by any accord. One story incorporates all three of those worries: Iran's failure to deliver on multiple pledges to answer questions about its suspected research on nuclear warheads. The United States believes that, prior to 2003, Iran conducted extensive studies and tests on building a bomb and mounting it on a long-range missile - belying its claims that it has pursued nuclear technology only for peaceful purposes. U.S. intelligence was long ago turned over to the International Atomic Energy Agency, and multiple U.N. Security Council resolutions, starting in 2006, have ordered Iran to cooperate with the IAEA in clarifying these 'possible military dimensions.' ... An appropriate response to this blatant violation of agreements would be to insist that Iran complete the IAEA work plan before any long-term accord is signed or any further sanctions lifted. Inspectors need their questions answered so that they will be able to determine later whether Iran has violated the controls on its nuclear research expected to be part of a deal. Furthermore, it is vital to establish that Tehran will deliver on its commitments and that it will be held accountable if it does not. Remarkably, however, negotiators - including the supposedly hard-line French, who have taken the lead on the 'military dimensions' issue - have reportedly agreed to let Iran's noncompliance slide. The IAEA's unanswered questions will be rolled over and rebundled into the new agreement, with a new time line. That means that Iran will have some sanctions lifted before it complies with a commitment it first made eight years ago. The question this raises was articulated months ago in congressional testimony by nuclear weapons expert David Albright: 'If Iran is able to successfully evade addressing the IAEA's concerns now, when biting sanctions are in place, why would it address them later when these sanctions are lifted?' In its rush to complete a deal, the Obama administration appears eager to ignore the likely answer." http://t.uani.com/1GGU1Gk

Ali Alfoneh & Reuel Marc Gerecht in WashPost: "We don't know all that has transpired in the talks on Iran's nuclear program being conducted in Switzerland, but we do know that the White House has shied away from a potentially paralyzing issue: the 'possible military dimensions' - the PMDs - of the regime's program. As Olli Heinonen, a former No. 2 at the International Atomic Energy Agency, has warned, outsiders really can have no idea where and how fast the mullahs could build a nuclear weapon unless they know what Iranian engineers have done in the past. Without 'go anywhere, anytime' access for IAEA inspectors and a thorough accounting of Tehran's weaponization research, we will be blind to the clerics' nuclear capabilities. And one of the most important issues - probable North Korean nuclear cooperation with the Islamic Republic - deserves special scrutiny. This disturbing partnership casts serious doubt on the Obama administration's hope that President Hassan Rouhani and his team have any intention of limiting Iran's nuclear ambitions. The unfinished North Korean-designed reactor that was destroyed by Israeli planes on Sept. 6, 2007, at Deir al-Zour in Syria was in all likelihood an Iranian project, perhaps one meant to serve as a backup site for Iran's own nuclear plants. We draw this conclusion because of the timing and the close connection between the two regimes: Deir al-Zour was started around the time Iran's nuclear facilities were disclosed by an Iranian opposition group in 2002, and the relationship between Shiite-ruled Syria and Shiite Iran has been exceptionally tight since Bashar al-Assad came to power in 2000. We also know - because Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, the former Iranian president and majordomo of the political clergy, proudly tells us in his multivolume autobiography - that sensitive Iranian-North Korean military cooperation began in 1989. Rafsanjani's commentary leaves little doubt that the Iranian-North Korean nexus revolved around two items: ballistic missiles and nuclear-weapons technology. In his memoirs, the bulk of which is composed of journal entries, Rafsanjani openly discusses Iran's arms and missile procurement from North Korea. However, from 1989 forward, his entries on Pyongyang become more opaque - a change, we believe, indicating emerging nuclear cooperation. By 1991, Rafsanjani discusses 'special and sensitive issues' related to North Korea in entries that are notably different from his candid commentary on tactical ballistic missiles. Rafsanjani mentions summoning Majid Abbaspour, who was the president's technical adviser on 'chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear industries,' into the discussions. Rafsanjani expresses his interest in importing a 'special commodity' from the North Koreans in return for oil shipments to Pyongyang. He insists that Iran gain unspecified 'technical know-how.' ... Odds are high that even today the Central Intelligence Agency doesn't know what Rafsanjani got from Pyongyang, but it is safe to surmise that the North Koreans weren't clandestinely building a peaceful nuclear reactor at Deir al-Zour . CIA Director John Brennan has often asserted that U.S. intelligence doesn't believe that the clerical regime is on the verge of making atomic weapons, and he further claimed that Langley could detect any Iranian decision to sneak toward the bomb. But Washington hasn't guessed correctly once since World War II about the timing of nuclear weaponization by foreign powers (the A-bombs of close allies Britain and France don't count). Odds are good that North Korea helped to jump-start Iran's nuclear-weapons program. If so, how long did this nefarious partnership continue? Rouhani was Rafsanjani's alter ego. He's undoubtedly the right man to answer all of the PMD questions that the IAEA keeps asking and the Obama administration keeps avoiding." http://t.uani.com/1CD4eSl
        

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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