Little-Acorn
03-31-2015, 11:20 AM
After months where the issue of Iran sending its enriched uranium out of the country has been floated, with Iran neither agreeing nor disagreeing, now they have announced there s no way they will do it.
The act of delaying this announcement until the day before the talks were supposed to conclude, makes it clear that Iran never intended to "agree" to anything. They are attending these talks simply to delay the United States and other countries, so they can gain more time to build their own atomic Bomb.
Expect the United States to meekly go along with this plan, granting more time "for more talks". The idea that they are giving Iran exactly what they want, is never mentioned in any media.
And the U.S. continues to pretend that Iran really wants to "solve the problem".
How a nation as strong as the U.S. can continue to negotiate from a position of such weakness, is one of the crowning mysteries of our time.
Unless you consider that perhaps the goals of the present administration may be the same as those of the mullahs.
In that case, this course of negotiate-negotiate-negotiate, "two steps forward and two steps back" (which has now gone on for years), makes perfect sense.
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http://freebeacon.com/issues/iran-refuses-to-give-up-core-nuke-materials/
Iran Refuses to Give Up Core Nuke Materials
Iran backs away from key concession as talks hit deadline
BY: Adam Kredo
March 30, 2015 3:55 pm
Lausanne, Switzerland — Iran is refusing to relinquish its stockpiles of enriched nuclear materials, throwing a potential complication into negotiations that are set to expire tomorrow, according to senior State Department officials and Iranian diplomats.
Iran rejected on Monday ongoing demands by Western powers that it export to Russia its stockpiles of enriched uranium, the key component in a nuclear bomb.
The issue has emerged as a sticking point in talks over the last day, with Iran now rejecting any potential compromise on this front. The State Department said that the issue has been up in the air for months, according to sources close to the negotiations.
“The export of stocks of enriched uranium is not in our program, and we do not intend sending them abroad,” Abbas Araqchi, an Iranian negotiator and diplomat, was quoted as telling the country’s state-run press. “There is no question of sending the stocks abroad.”
A subsequent New York Times article claiming that discussions over the issue have hit a wall in the last day prompted the State Department to reveal that negotiations over the export of uranium have been stuck for quite some time.
The act of delaying this announcement until the day before the talks were supposed to conclude, makes it clear that Iran never intended to "agree" to anything. They are attending these talks simply to delay the United States and other countries, so they can gain more time to build their own atomic Bomb.
Expect the United States to meekly go along with this plan, granting more time "for more talks". The idea that they are giving Iran exactly what they want, is never mentioned in any media.
And the U.S. continues to pretend that Iran really wants to "solve the problem".
How a nation as strong as the U.S. can continue to negotiate from a position of such weakness, is one of the crowning mysteries of our time.
Unless you consider that perhaps the goals of the present administration may be the same as those of the mullahs.
In that case, this course of negotiate-negotiate-negotiate, "two steps forward and two steps back" (which has now gone on for years), makes perfect sense.
------------------------------------------------------------
http://freebeacon.com/issues/iran-refuses-to-give-up-core-nuke-materials/
Iran Refuses to Give Up Core Nuke Materials
Iran backs away from key concession as talks hit deadline
BY: Adam Kredo
March 30, 2015 3:55 pm
Lausanne, Switzerland — Iran is refusing to relinquish its stockpiles of enriched nuclear materials, throwing a potential complication into negotiations that are set to expire tomorrow, according to senior State Department officials and Iranian diplomats.
Iran rejected on Monday ongoing demands by Western powers that it export to Russia its stockpiles of enriched uranium, the key component in a nuclear bomb.
The issue has emerged as a sticking point in talks over the last day, with Iran now rejecting any potential compromise on this front. The State Department said that the issue has been up in the air for months, according to sources close to the negotiations.
“The export of stocks of enriched uranium is not in our program, and we do not intend sending them abroad,” Abbas Araqchi, an Iranian negotiator and diplomat, was quoted as telling the country’s state-run press. “There is no question of sending the stocks abroad.”
A subsequent New York Times article claiming that discussions over the issue have hit a wall in the last day prompted the State Department to reveal that negotiations over the export of uranium have been stuck for quite some time.