And, like most tantrums, it won’t change a thing. John Hinderaker notes that the media just can’t seem to bring themselves to admit that a course of action has failed (and predictably so).
You almost have to laugh at the way the media cover the "international community’s" kicking of the Iran can down the road. The board of the International Atomic Energy Agency, which a few days ago acknowledged that its policy toward Iran had "reached a dead end," has passed a resolution criticizing Iran for flouting U.N. resolutions and demanding that it stop work on nuclear weapons. The Associated Press risibly declares this a "blow" to the mullahs.
This assumes that the mullahs actually care about world opinion. Recent history does not tend to suggest this is true (to put it mildly). What is true, as documented by The Israel Project, are these facts and figures:
President Barack Obama recently warned that time is “running out†for Iran to join international negotiations over its nuclear program.[1] The Islamic Republic, the world’s leading state-sponsor of terror, has been deceiving the international community about its nuclear activities for almost a decade, prompting British Prime Minister Gordon Brown to declare that “the international community has no choice today but to draw a line in the sand†regarding Iran’s nuclear aspirations.[2]
Following are facts and figures relating to Iran’s nuclear violations, terror sponsorship and domestic and international affairs.Nuclear Activity
• 5,412: Centrifuges Iran is operating for uranium enrichment as of February 2009. Another 125 have been installed but are not currently being used.[3]
• 2.75 kilograms (6.1 lbs): Amount of low-enriched uranium (LEU) Iran was reportedly producing daily as of June 5, 2009. At this rate, Iran would have enough weapons-grade uranium to create two nuclear weapons by February 2010. If all reported 7,052 centrifuges were used, the weapons could be developed as early as mid-December 2009.[4]
• 4: UN Security Council (UNSC) resolutions calling for Iran to halt its uranium enrichment program which Iran is currently defying: UNSC resolutions 1696, 1737, 1747 and 1803.[5]
• 3,000: Number of centrifuges IAEA inspectors confirmed the once-secret Qom nuclear facility is capable of housing; enough to produce material for nuclear weapons but unsuitable for the production of fuel for civilian purposes.[6]
• Approximately 6: Countries—including Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Turkey—which would also pursue nuclear technology if Iran’s nuclear program continues to develop, initiating a Middle East arms race and destabilizing the entire region.[7]
When you’ve dithered for almost a decade, how much more time do you give them? Enough time to build a bomb and start an arms race? As I’ve said before, sometimes when diplomacy fails, it’s not necessarily a failure of those trying to prevent conflict. Some people/countries will simply not be negotiated with. Iran, I believe, has proven itself, quite clearly, to be one of these.
2 users commented in " Iran Disses UN, UN Has Temper Tantrum "
Follow-up comment rss or Leave a TrackbackDoug Payton; your miss representation of the current situation with Iran’s nuclear program is laughable. Iran’s LEU is still under the IAEA control and Iran has complied with all the NPT requirements. After 10 years of inspections by the IAEA no smoking gun has been found. Iran is a signatory to NPT and repeatedly have said that nuclear bomb has no place in their defense structure. So, why are you spreading so much poison and miss-information around? Iran could have kicked the IAEA out of Iran a year ago and build a A-bomb, but they have not, have they?
Under the NPT any nation in the world can have nuclear energy, no matter how much you and your kind does not like it.
Esther, it’s the IAEA itself that is considering Iran at a “dead end”, and passing resolutions criticizing them. Appealing to their authority is moot because Iran isn’t properly recognizing their authority. It’s the President of the United States saying they’re running out of time, and it’s the British PM drawing a line in the sand. I’m not making this up out of whole cloth.
Iran has threatened to pull out of the NPT, and recently reneged on a deal to send the LEU, supposedly “controlled” by the IAEA, to Russia. These are not the actions of a trustworthy government.
I (and “my kind”) would love to see Iran get a working civilian nuclear energy program working. That’s nowhere near the issue. The issue is trust.
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