Sunday, July 12, 2015

Does negotiation with Iran pave Mullahs path to nuclear bomb?


The P5+1 group -- Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States -- extend negotiations with Iran, seeking a deal to curb Iran’s nuclear ambitions, with no sign of any end to the nail-biting deadlock. Now the deadline for the negotiations has passed again.
But despite progress on a series of complicated annexes, the negotiations have bogged down on how to ease a web of sanctions against Iran, probing allegations that in the past Tehran sought to develop nuclear arms, and ensuring Iran can continue to have a modest, peaceful nuclear program.
Do Iran continue to have a modest, peaceful nuclear program?


Mullahs in Iran are the worst leading state sponsor of terror, they’re a major violator of human rights and they have been deceptive since day one when they got engaged in their nuclear weapons program run by the Iranian revolutionary guards.
Since 20 years ago, Iranian regime tried to cover up its Nuclear Weapons Program. Now, how powers want trust Iran.
The whole issue of extension really means that there will be more time to give up more things to the Iranian regime. Anyway Iran continue its nuclear ambitions because Mullahs seek to acquire nuclear weapons to guarantee their own existence in Iran.
An Iran freed from crippling economic sanctions and the arms embargo could result in greater assertiveness from the Islamic State group. Iran already supports Shiite armed groups against Sunnis in Iraq, Lebanon and Syria. Even countries in the region have to overcome long-running mistrust of Iran.
So, US should not enter in agreement with Iran that allows Iran to have any nuclear capacity. Iran’s nuclear progress would continue for suspicious activity, and any attempt to build a weapon would result in swift, punitive action on the part of the U.S. and its international partners.
On top of these forceful and intrusive measures, separate sanctions that have been levied against Iran for state sponsorship of terrorism and human rights abuses would remain in place, and even if it signs off on this deal, the U.S. Congress would be all but guaranteed to remain steadfast in its commitment to these sanctions for the foreseeable future.
The whole point of sanctions is to gain concessions. Nuclear sanctions are lifted in exchange for nuclear concessions, human rights for human rights, and so on. Iran should not be rewarded for steps it has not taken.
It is important to remember that Iran built its current program under sanctions. Additional sanctions will therefore not be enough to stop the country from taking its last few, much smaller, steps toward the bomb. The ultimate solution to nuclear crisis is regime change in Iran.

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