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Iran nuclear deal: Key points

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Wonderful deal, indeed. ^^

Iran nuclear deal: Key points

24 November 2013 Last updated at 16:24 GMT

World powers and Iran have signed a deal on Iran's nuclear programme following intense talks in Geneva.

Both sides committed to a series of steps which will last for six months, while a more conclusive deal is negotiated.

Here are the key points of what the two sides agreed:


What Iran will do

- Halt enrichment of uranium above 5% purity


- "Neutralise" its stockpile of near-20%-enriched uranium, either by diluting it to less than 5% or converting it to a form which cannot be further enriched

- Not install any more centrifuges (the machines used to enrich uranium)

- Leave half to three-quarters of centrifuges installed in Natanz and Fordo enrichment facilities inoperable

- Not build any more enrichment facilities

- Not increase its stockpile of 3.5% low-enriched uranium

- Halt work on the construction of its heavy-water reactor at Arak, not attempt to produce plutonium there

- Provide daily access to Natanz and Fordo sites to IAEA inspectors and access to other facilities, mines and mills

- Provide "long-sought" information on the Arak reactor and other data



What the P5+1 will do

- Provide "limited, temporary, targeted, and reversible [sanctions] relief"

- Not impose further nuclear-related sanctions if Iran meets its commitments

- Suspend certain sanctions on trade in gold and precious metals, Iran's automotive sector, and its petrochemical exports

- Licence safety-related repairs and inspections inside Iran for certain Iranian airlines

- Transfer $4.2bn to Iran in instalments from sales of its oil

BBC


And in addition, now we will can quietly enrich our uranium (KSA, UAE, Jordan, maybe Egypt). ^^

Continue... See old link :

Russia firms to build Jordan’s first nuclear plant

...
 
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Breaking down the Iran nuclear deal

By CNN Staff
November 24, 2013 -- Updated 1635 GMT (0035 HKT)

(CNN) --
The White House late Saturday issued a detailed synopsis, or "fact sheet," of the six-month deal regarding Iran's nuclear program.

Read the deal (.PDF)


Below is a copy of the agreement's details, verbatim from the White House:

Halting the progress of Iran's program and rolling back key elements

Iran has committed to halt enrichment above 5%:

• Halt all enrichment (above 5% and dismantle the technical connections required to enrich above 5%.

Iran has committed to neutralize its stockpile of near-20% uranium:

• Dilute below 5% or convert to a form not suitable for further enrichment its entire stockpile of near-20% enriched uranium before the end of the initial phase.

Iran has committed to halt progress on its enrichment capacity:

• Not install additional centrifuges of any type.

• Not install or use any next-generation centrifuges to enrich uranium.

• Leave inoperable roughly half of installed centrifuges at Natanz and three-quarters of installed centrifuges at Fordow, so they cannot be used to enrich uranium.

• Limit its centrifuge production to those needed to replace damaged machines, so Iran cannot use the six months to stockpile centrifuges.

• Not construct additional enrichment facilities.

Iran has committed to halt progress on the growth of its 3.5% stockpile:

• Not increase its stockpile of 3.5% low enriched uranium, so that the amount is not greater at the end of the six months than it is at the beginning, and any newly enriched 3.5% enriched uranium is converted into oxide.

Iran has committed to no further advances of its activities at Arak and to halt progress on its plutonium track. Iran has committed to:

• Not commission the Arak reactor.

• Not fuel the Arak reactor.

• Halt the production of fuel for the Arak reactor.

• No additional testing of fuel for the Arak reactor.

• Not install any additional reactor components at Arak.

• Not transfer fuel and heavy water to the reactor site.

• Not construct a facility capable of reprocessing. Without reprocessing, Iran cannot separate plutonium from spent fuel.

Unprecedented transparency and intrusive monitoring of Iran's nuclear program

Iran has committed to:

• Provide daily access by IAEA inspectors at Natanz and Fordow. This daily access will permit inspectors to review surveillance camera footage to ensure comprehensive monitoring. This access will provide even greater transparency into enrichment at these sites and shorten detection time for any non-compliance.

• Provide IAEA access to centrifuge assembly facilities.

• Provide IAEA access to centrifuge rotor component production and storage facilities.

• Provide IAEA access to uranium mines and mills.

• Provide long-sought design information for the Arak reactor. This will provide critical insight into the reactor that has not previously been available.

• Provide more frequent inspector access to the Arak reactor.

• Provide certain key data and information called for in the Additional Protocol to Iran's IAEA Safeguards Agreement and Modified Code 3.1.

Verification mechanism

The IAEA will be called upon to perform many of these verification steps, consistent with their ongoing inspection role in Iran. In addition, the P5+1 and Iran have committed to establishing a Joint Commission to work with the IAEA to monitor implementation and address issues that may arise. The Joint Commission will also work with the IAEA to facilitate resolution of past and present concerns with respect to Iran's nuclear program, including the possible military dimension of Iran's nuclear program and Iran's activities at Parchin.


Limited, temporary, reversible relief

In return for these steps, the P5+1 is to provide limited, temporary, targeted, and reversible relief while maintaining the vast bulk of our sanctions, including the oil, finance, and banking sanctions architecture. If Iran fails to meet its commitments, we will revoke the relief. Specifically the P5+1 has committed to:

• Not impose new nuclear-related sanctions for six months, if Iran abides by its commitments under this deal, to the extent permissible within their political systems.

• Suspend certain sanctions on gold and precious metals, Iran's auto sector, and Iran's petrochemical exports, potentially providing Iran approximately $1.5 billion in revenue.

• License safety-related repairs and inspections inside Iran for certain Iranian airlines.

• Allow purchases of Iranian oil to remain at their currently significantly reduced levels -- levels that are 60% less than two years ago. $4.2 billion from these sales will be allowed to be transferred in installments if, and as, Iran fulfills its commitments.

• Allow $400 million in governmental tuition assistance to be transferred from restricted Iranian funds directly to recognized educational institutions in third countries to defray the tuition costs of Iranian students.


Humanitarian transactions

Facilitate humanitarian transactions that are already allowed by U.S. law. Humanitarian transactions have been explicitly exempted from sanctions by Congress so this channel will not provide Iran access to any new source of funds. Humanitarian transactions are those related to Iran's purchase of food, agricultural commodities, medicine, medical devices; we would also facilitate transactions for medical expenses incurred abroad. We will establish this channel for the benefit of the Iranian people.


Putting limited relief in perspective

In total, the approximately $7 billion in relief is a fraction of the costs that Iran will continue to incur during this first phase under the sanctions that will remain in place. The vast majority of Iran's approximately $100 billion in foreign exchange holdings are inaccessible or restricted by sanctions.

In the next six months, Iran's crude oil sales cannot increase. Oil sanctions alone will result in approximately $30 billion in lost revenues to Iran -- or roughly $5 billion per month -- compared to what Iran earned in a six month period in 2011, before these sanctions took effect. While Iran will be allowed access to $4.2 billion of its oil sales, nearly $15 billion of its revenues during this period will go into restricted overseas accounts. In summary, we expect the balance of Iran's money in restricted accounts overseas will actually increase, not decrease, under the terms of this deal.


Maintaining economic pressure on Iran and preserving our sanctions architecture

During the first phase, we will continue to vigorously enforce our sanctions against Iran, including by taking action against those who seek to evade or circumvent our sanctions.

• Sanctions affecting crude oil sales will continue to impose pressure on Iran's government. Working with our international partners, we have cut Iran's oil sales from 2.5 million barrels per day (bpd) in early 2012 to 1 million bpd today, denying Iran the ability to sell almost 1.5 million bpd. That's a loss of more than $80 billion since the beginning of 2012 that Iran will never be able to recoup. Under this first step, the EU crude oil ban will remain in effect and Iran will be held to approximately 1 million bpd in sales, resulting in continuing lost sales worth an additional $4 billion per month, every month, going forward.

• Sanctions affecting petroleum product exports to Iran, which result in billions of dollars of lost revenue, will remain in effect.

• The vast majority of Iran's approximately $100 billion in foreign exchange holdings remain inaccessible or restricted by our sanctions.

• Other significant parts of our sanctions regime remain intact, including:

-- Sanctions against the Central Bank of Iran and approximately two dozen other major Iranian banks and financial actors;

-- Secondary sanctions, pursuant to the Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability, and Divestment Act (CISADA) as amended and other laws, on banks that do business with U.S.-designated individuals and entities;

-- Sanctions on those who provide a broad range of other financial services to Iran, such as many types of insurance; and,

-- Restricted access to the U.S. financial system.

• All sanctions on over 600 individuals and entities targeted for supporting Iran's nuclear or ballistic missile program remain in effect.

• Sanctions on several sectors of Iran's economy, including shipping and shipbuilding, remain in effect.

• Sanctions on long-term investment in and provision of technical services to Iran's energy sector remain in effect.

• Sanctions on Iran's military program remain in effect.

• Broad U.S. restrictions on trade with Iran remain in effect, depriving Iran of access to virtually all dealings with the world's biggest economy.

• All UN Security Council sanctions remain in effect.

• All of our targeted sanctions related to Iran's state sponsorship of terrorism, its destabilizing role in the Syrian conflict, and its abysmal human rights record, among other concerns, remain in effect.


CNN
 
^^

Tut-Tut ! You know well it is great saint Supreme Leader Khamenei decides everything.
 
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Jawad Zarrif is a brave Iranian nationalist , he brought what Iran has always wanted " right to enrich "

Well its not formulated as a "right" in the draft that was signed by P 5+1 and Iran. West was careful in the wording, and dint want to word it as a "right" because then they would have to grant every nation on earth same right, which is a proliferation risk.

Rather the agreement says any agreement, whether interim or final, indigineous enrichment on Iranian soil will be part of it.
 
Well its not formulated as a "right" in the draft that was signed by P 5+1 and Iran. West was careful in the wording, and dint want to word it as a "right" because then they would have to grant every nation on earth same right, which is a proliferation risk.

Rather the agreement says any agreement, whether interim or final, indigineous enrichment on Iranian soil will be part of it.
That is just a wording, the big news for Iran is that she won, and accommodation with a nuclear Iran has been reached....The United has dismembered the Arab state, but the rise of fundamentalism islam in the area is dangerous and hard to contain....Bringing Iran in, was the solution the reign in the wahabism and the salafism....Just like all time...For Israel, a $ a B or 2 will bring them to the fold and Natanyahu will be dancing two steps with Khameini! Congrat to Iran and to the whole region...At least peace between the two big neighbors is in the offing...
 


Well most of this came from donations ,
Well its not formulated as a "right" in the draft that was signed by P 5+1 and Iran. West was careful in the wording, and dint want to word it as a "right" because then they would have to grant every nation on earth same right, which is a proliferation risk.

Rather the agreement says any agreement, whether interim or final, indigineous enrichment on Iranian soil will be part of it.

Does not matter whether west agrees or not , you will Just enrich .

World Cup and Nuclear Enrichment hurray , now is time to party

That is just a wording, the big news for Iran is that she won, and accommodation with a nuclear Iran has been reached....The United has dismembered the Arab state, but the rise of fundamentalism islam in the area is dangerous and hard to contain....Bringing Iran in, was the solution the reign in the wahabism and the salafism....Just like all time...For Israel, a $ a B or 2 will bring them to the fold and Natanyahu will be dancing two steps with Khameini! Congrat to Iran and to the whole region...At least peace between the two big neighbors is in the offing...

Actually Israel won most out of all this , you know all countries have right to enrich for civilian purposes , they Just pressed on Iran so that they reach an agreement on a larger political solution in favor of Israel and the destruction of Syria was Just part of it and eventually disarming Hezbollah .

2014 will convey most of this political settlement especially Syria and Lebanon .
 
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