Tuesday, May 27, 2008

INTERESTING NEWS ITEM

While I was at work, I noticed an interesting news item on the front page of the ATLANTA JOURNAL CONSTITUTION.  The headline read, "UN: Iran May Be Masking Nuclear Program."  This intrigued me, especially taking into consideration several things.  But before I get into that, here's the article on FOX NEWS:

U.N.: Iran May Be Hiding Nuke Evidence From Investigators

Associated Press

VIENNA, Austria —  Iran may be withholding information needed to establish whether it tried to make nuclear arms, the International Atomic Energy Agency said Monday in an unusually strongly worded report.

The tone of the language suggesting Tehran continues to stonewall the U.N. nuclear monitor revealed a glimpse of the frustration felt by agency investigators stymied in their attempts to gain full answers to suspicious aspects of Iran's past nuclear activities.

A senior U.N. official familiar with the investigation into Iran's nuclear program said none of the dozens of agency reports issued in that context had ever been as plain spoken in calling Tehran to task for not being forthright. He agreed to discuss the report only if granted anonymity because he was not authorized to comment to the media.

Iran has described its cooperation with the agency's probe as positive, suggesting it was providing information requested by agency officials.

Ali Ashgar Soltanieh, Iran's chief delegate to the IAEA, said as much again Monday, telling The Associated Press that the report described "the peaceful nature of our nuclear actions."

The Americans failed ... in shameful attempts" to co-opt the agency into delivering anti-Iranian findings, he said.

He noted a paragraph in the report saying that agency experts had been given access to all declared nuclear material in Iran and verified that all of it was accounted for.

But Gregory L. Schulte, his U.S. counterpart, suggested the report was a strong indictment of Iran's defiance of the international community's efforts to get answers about troubling parts of its nuclear program, noting it "details a long list of questions that Iran has failed to answer."

"At the same time that Iran is stonewalling its inspectors, it's moving forward in developing its enrichment capability in violation of Security Council resolutions," Schulte told the AP.

He described parts of the report as a "direct rebuttal" of Iranian claims that all nuclear questions had been answered.

U.S. intelligence says Iran stopped work on nuclear weapons in 2003 but some other nations believe such activities continued past that date. The report noted Iran continued to deny such allegations.

Obtained by the AP, the restricted report forwarded to the U.N. Security Council and to the 35 board members of the IAEA said Iran remains defiant of the council's demands that it suspend uranium enrichment.

Shrugging off three sets of council sanctions, Iran has expanded its operational centrifuges — machines that churn out enriched uranium — by about 500 since the last IAEA report, in February, the new report said.

In announcing major progress in his government's push for nuclear power, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said last month that Iranian scientists were putting 6,000 new uranium enriching centrifuges into place and testing a new type that worked five times faster.

The IAEA report noted Iran now had only 3,500 centrifuges and said the few advanced machines actually running were only in a testing phase. Still the senior U.N. official said Iran's goal of 6,000 machines running by the summer was "pretty much plausible."

Uranium can be used as nuclear reactor fuel or as the core for atomic warheads, depending on the degree of enrichment.

Running smoothly, 3,000 centrifuges could produce enough nuclear material for a bomb within 18 months. But Iran insists it is only working to produce fuel for reactors that will generate electricity and says it has a right to conduct enrichment for such purposes under the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.

In addressing whether Iran was complying with IAEA requests, the report appeared to come down on the side of the U.S. "Iran has not provided the Agency with all the information, access to documents and access to individuals necessary to support Iran's statements" that its activities are purely peaceful in intent, it said.

The Agency is of the view that Iran may have additional information, in particular on high explosives testing and missile related activities which ... Iran should share with the agency," the report said. It was referring to two alleged sets of tests that IAEA officials say could be linked to a nuclear weapons program.

The allegations of nuclear military programs "remain a matter of serious concern," the report said. Suggesting fears of clandestine weapons activities remain, it added: "Clarification of these is critical to an assessment of the nature of Iran's past and present nuclear program."

Iran already rejected evidence provided by the U.S and other IAEA board members on alleged weapons programs in February, but then promised to revisit the issue before the agency's next board meeting in a week.

Intelligence received by the IAEA in its investigations, as well as from the U.S. and other agency board member nations, suggest Iran experimented with an undeclared uranium enrichment program that was linked to a missile project and drew up blueprints on refitting missiles to allow them to carry nuclear warheads.

The intelligence also suggested Iran was researching construction of an underground site that apparently could be used to test fire nuclear bombs and ordered "dual use" equipment from abroad that could be part of an atomic weapons program.

Additionally, Iran possesses diagrams showing how to mold uranium metal into the shape of warheads.

Its nuclear work has been under IAEA investigation since 2003, when a dissident Iranian group revealed the existence of a clandestine enrichment program.

A personal note:  now isn't it quite clear why NORTH KOREA is partially funding Iran's nuclear program?  It's not to keep the lights on there!

Before I continue, here is Senator Obama's plan regarding Iran:

If elected President, Obama is in favor of  "economic sanctions", but only after carefully sifting through the intelligence.  As you read in the article above, it's been "sifted" since 2003.  I don't think we need to waste any more time with the "sifting".  And while we wait for the "economic sanctions" against Iran to take effect over a period of time, which in the past has been years, Iran develops nuclear weapons.  It would appear they are well on their right now.  Senator Obama's plan is the same worn out thing that I heard all the time I was growing up when the U.S. was the subject of a number of terrorist attacks overseas.  We would file our "formal protests", then apply "economic sanctions", and all the while conducting endless, meaningless negotiations that accomplished nothing other than political grandstanding and giving the terrorists time to plan another attack.  None of that has worked.  Senator Obama also indicated that we should talk with the Iranian president.  Only one problem:  terrorists do not negotiate.  Iran is a terrorist state.  North Korea partially funds their nuclear development program.  Red China sells arms to Iran.  Need I continue? 

What I find very interesting about this whole thing is that the UNITED NATIONS, which is made up of mostly our enemies, and every key committee has mainly if not all enemy nations represented (for example, Red China on the Human Rights Commission - isn't that rich??), and the U. N.'s position is that Iran is a serious threat and has withheld information about its nuclear program atthe very least.  The liberal left in our country, is of the opinion that Iran is not a serious threat, and that President Bush is just looking for a reason to start another war before he leaves office.  So, in comparison to the U. N., just where does that put the left in our country? 

Just for the record, I hate war.  I despise it, I hate what it does to families, I hate what it does to the combat survivors, and I hate the loss of human life.  I wish we lived in a world where it did not happen.  But, throughout history, the United States has never started a war.  Countries ruled by dictators with visions of world domination attempting to carry it out, terrorist states, and oppressive regimes always start it, either by attacking or threatening our allies, or attacking us directly, are the ones that start it.  We have to go finish it.  And in the WAR ON TERROR, for once, in the words of one young Marine, "we took the ballgame to THEIR five yardline."  I've been sickened for thirty years by our weak-spined political grandstanding in response to terrorist attacks against the United States at which the terrorist countries and our other enemies just laughed.  Even as a pre-teen and teenager, I kept saying the only thing terrorists understand is force which isa military response.  And if Iran has not gotten the idea by now that we mean business, then we should go ahead and take care of business before Iran develops nuclear weapons.  The entire world will lose in a nuclear confrontation between Iran and Israel and/or the U.S.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

And your solution is??? I'd really be interested in knowing. Eveeryone seems to skirt the answer. Bluntly put, are you suggesting we bomb the hell out of Iran before they do the USA?

Anonymous said...

This is nasty, scary stuff and I don't even want to think about how this is all going to play out in the long run.  I surely don't know the answer....if there IS an answer.
Lisa

Anonymous said...

Excellent post Dirk!!  I've been watching with interest the situation in Iran for a couple of years, and I think that they are closer to enrichment than most people realize.  It is interesting that even the UN is seeming to wonder as well now.  I agree almost word for word what you said about war, and that the US has never started a war.  What I've noticed is that when we finally decided enough was enough- and Pres. Bush sent out our military to kick some royal jihhadist butt- we have not had 1 attack on our soil.  The enemy has been forced to deal with our soldiers and are losing ground.  If the left in this country take the helm come January, I am afraid allground our guys have gained will be lost.  How much more"talking and dialogue" do they expect to do?  We have been talking, and as you said, putting on sanctions, none of these things have worked in the past.  Lets keep pandering until they send a nuke our way?  Ah, I think that there is going to be a lot of interesting things taking place in the next few years- things that the Bible has said were going to happen.  In the meantime- I think we should still play offense, before we are blasted so badly we won't have a defense left to play.  God Bless you Dirk.  Thank you for your excellent posts!  Keep us informed!  Carolyn

Anonymous said...

I say nuke 'em first! Wipe them off the map and then we have nothing to worry about. Casualties make no difference to me if it will save my own butt as well as my freedom (what little I have anyway)  -Missy http://journals.aol.com/ma24179/MISSYZSTUFF