Ayatollah Khamenei rejects talks with US under pressure

Oct 18, 2010
6,271
849
#25
We went through this in the past. This is the most rediculous thing I have heard. Who declares Parchin to be a nuclear site? Let me see, IRI has never declared it to be a nuclear site, and therefore IRI has no obligation to allow access? Do you see the irony, or you just like to make arguments? The point is that they have undeclared sites, and one of them is Parchin.
i see no irony whatsoever.iran signed npt and they play by the rules of npt as is,no more and no less.even iaea is not saying iran has an obligation to open parchin.they are "requesting" iran to let them inspect that site because they have some "intelligence" that might point to nuclear activity at that site.they know this is beyond the scope of npt.every 10 years there is a review conference for npt.if new rules are passed in this regard then iran is obligated to play accordingly.until then,it is business as usual.
 
Oct 18, 2010
6,271
849
#32
To PB,

Has IAEA ever found a site that should have been declared by Iran but was not?
i don't know.my understanding is under npt rules every signatory is to inform iaea 180 days before any new site goes into operation.i think iran has followed
this pretty tightly meaning they have given notice right at the deadline.btw,this is the relevant article from npt in regards to enrichment which give iran the right
inalienable right to pursue uranium enrichment:

Article IV

1. Nothing in this Treaty shall be interpreted as affecting the inalienable right of all the Parties to the Treaty to develop research, production and use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes without discrimination and in conformity with Articles I and II of this Treaty.

http://www.un.org/en/conf/npt/2005/npttreaty.html
 

Hooshmand

Elite Member
Oct 12, 2011
8,762
1,008
UK
#34
Key mishe in Khamenei e pisag bemireh mardom e iran az dastesh rahat beshand!! akhe yeki nist be in Pire khereft bege .. mardom toro entekhab nakardand kasi be to ray nadade ke az janeb e mardom tasmim giri mikoni!! Amrica va UK ro karde loooloo khorkhore vali az koone china va russia mikhore! bad
 
Oct 18, 2010
6,271
849
#35
We are not debating the right. What is at issue is accurate disclosure. They have not done that. Why was Natanz revelation such a big deal 10 years ago?
we are not but the anti-iran forces in iaea are doing it.they want iran to stop enrichment which is totally against the spirit of npt.and they are going the wrong way about it as it is documented by the iaea in their recent visit and acknowledged by nuclear scientists today(see below).as i said previously iran is in the catbird seat and going back to the topic of this thread the ayatollah is doing the very prudent thing with his recent pronouncements.

[h=1]Iran’s Nuclear-Technology Gains Suggest Sanctions Are Backfiring[/h] By Jonathan Tirone - Feb 15, 2013
International sanctions designed to punish Iran for its nuclear program may be counter-productive, said scientists and security analysts tracking the decade-long dispute over the Persian Gulf nation’s atomic work.
While trade and financial sanctions have choked off Iran’s access to materials such as aluminum and maraging steel used to make its first generation of nuclear equipment, they have spurred the Islamic Republic to find its own solutions for subsequent technological innovations. Now, Iran is positioned to both build better nuclear devices and export them.
“The serious consequence of all of these sanctions are that you drive the indigenous production of these parts,” Ferenc Dalnoki-Veress, a physicist at the Monterrey, California- based James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, wrote in response to questions. “This means the proliferator learns more about the technology and so now they don’t only know how to produce the parts, but they could also sell them to other states.”
As embargoes strangle Iran’s ability to import high-quality metals and fibers needed to build nuclear components, the country’s own resources, including oil, sand and zinc, mean it can overcome technical hurdles. Last month, Iran notified United Nations International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors it would begin installing 3,000 domestically built centrifuges that can produce more enriched uranium in less time.
[h=2]Raw Materials[/h] “Most technologies in use are decades-old, well-proven, well-published concepts,” said Andreas Persbo, executive director of the London-based Verification Research, Training and Information Center, a non-governmental observer to the IAEA. “The key thing is to get access to the raw material. If you have the raw material, and a talent base to process them, you can construct whatever you need.”
Iran, with the world’s fourth-biggest proven oil reserves, began in 2011 to make its own carbon fiber, the strong, light material used in wind turbines, airplanes and centrifuges. Like the uranium-enrichment market, which is led by a handful of companies such as Urenco Ltd., Areva SA and Rosatom Corp., carbon-fiber production is driven by a few multinational businesses including Hexcel Corp., BAE Systems Plc and Toray Industries Inc.
“While the sanctions regime certainly slowed down Iran’s technological progress initially, it has also made Iran self- sufficient in a number of key areas,” said Yousaf Butt, a physicist and nuclear non-proliferation analyst who advised the U.S. National Academy of Sciences on Iran’s nuclear work. “Iran is likely the most technologically advanced nation in the Middle East, aside from Israel.”
[h=2]Self-Sufficient[/h] The Islamic Republic has also achieved self-sufficiency in other vital technology areas touched by sanctions. The country manufacturers and sells Fomblin oil, a lubricant used inside centrifuges, on world markets. At a September IAEA meeting in Vienna, Iran displayed a copy of a domestically made nuclear- fuel panel destined for a research reactor in Tehran.
“If in the past the country needed finished products and technologies for its program which squarely fell under sanctions, now the required level of imported inputs is continuously going down to more simple and basic items which Iran still needs but can upgrade on its own,” according to Igor Khripunov, the Soviet Union’s former arms-control envoy to the U.S. who is now at the Athens, Georgia-based Center for International Trade and Security.
[h=2]Kazakhstan Meeting[/h] Iran, which maintains its atomic program is peaceful, has ruled out suspending its activities as the UN Security Council demands. It’s willing to discuss its nuclear work when it meets world powers in Kazakhstan next week, Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said Feb. 4. Talks between Iran and IAEA officials that concluded Feb. 13 in Tehran failed to clinch a deal that would give investigators wider access to alleged nuclear sites.
While Iran allowed wider access to sites, including centrifuge-manufacturing workshops, until 2005, it reversed course after accusations about its nuclear work escalated. The first UN sanctions were imposed in 2006. The country hasn't restricted IAEA access to sites it’s legally bound to let inspectors visit.
Diplomats should focus on returning to greater transparency of Iran’s nuclear facilities rather than trying to enforce a ban on enrichment, said Paul Ingram, executive director of the London-based British American Security Information Council, a policy-advisory group.
“Iran has a sophisticated economy relative to most states outside of North America, Europe and the Far East, so it should be no surprise that they can develop the technologies to substitute for sanctioned materials,” Ingram wrote in reply to questions. “The experience of sanctions proves this time and time again.”