Hence, instead of looking for military confrontation, you must accommodate.
We are not privy to the details of these negotiations. So for now we have no choice but to be content with what our journalists and analysts managed to deduce.
Nothing gives you the right to hold on to your "destructive weapons"...
Since the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the USSR, both sides have been working to reduce the number of nuclear warhead stockpiles. There are plenty of NPT signatories that have not violated the agreement and they survive just fine.
...and deny Iran even the right to enrich Uranium.
You are misleading the readership. I will set the record straight. The issue is neither about nuclear technology nor enrichment but about
ENRICHMENT LEVEL.
Iran Begins Enriching Uranium to a Higher Level - NYTimes.com
The Western concern is that enrichment to 20 percent would enable Iran to produce weapons-grade uranium...
That %20 is where we can produce a nuclear chain reaction that we can control. Above that is when this process
CAN BECOME uncontrollable, in other words, a nuclear detonation. Below %20 is when it is commercially viable for power generation. The greater the concentration of U-235 the smaller the overall size of the uranium block and still can produce a chain reaction.
Iran boosts nuclear enrichment, drawing warnings - Sacramento News - Local and Breaking Sacramento News | Sacramento Bee
Iran's current stockpile has been spun to a level of 3.5 percent, suitable for use in fueling power plants, which is Iran's primary stated aim for its enrichment program.
Although material for the fissile core of a nuclear warhead must be enriched to a level of 90 percent or more, just getting its stockpile to the 20 percent mark would be a major step for Iran.
Above %20 enrichment does not guarantee an uncontrolled chain reaction, aka ka-blooey. What it mean is that there is an increased odds of a chunk of %20+ enriched uranium to go ka-blooey. That is why nuclear
WEAPONS warheads are %90+ enriched. These blocks of uranium are smaller and virtually guaranteed to produce an uncontrolled nuclear chain reaction. For power generation, we want to maintain control so less than %20 is preferred. The only time we want %90 enriched uranium for power generation is...
USS Enterprise (CVN-65) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
USS Enterprise (CVN-65), formerly CVA(N)-65, is the world's first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier and the eighth US naval vessel to bear the name.
Nuclear powered ships and submarines uses %90 enriched uranium because of space limitations. Does Iran have a real estate shortage for nuclear power stations?
This is why no one in the nuclear business take seriously Iranian claims of peaceful power generation at %20+ enrichment. People like this man...
Mark Hibbs, leading journalist on nuclear energy, joins Carnegie Nuclear Policy Program - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
January 27, 2010
WASHINGTON, Jan 27Mark Hibbs, one of the worlds most acclaimed investigative reporters on nuclear energy and proliferation, will join the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. For over two decades Hibbs has covered proliferation networks, the International Atomic Energy Agency, and nuclear trade for leading publications, including Nucleonics Week and Nuclear Fuel.
Mark Hibbs is a legend in the nuclear world. Governments, industry, NGOs, the mediathey all know Mark as a fount of hard-to-get information and analysis on a wide range of nuclear topics.
Other experts are the three IAEA inspection teams for Iraq headed by Rolf Ekeus, Hans Blix and Richard Butler. All non-Americans. These people are not fools, including Mark Hibbs who is a reporter by profession. The current IAEA inspectors for Iran are not idiots either. They know that Iran has no good cause for greater than %20 enrichment.
Also, Iran agreed to the crux of the deal, that it will send its Uranium outside the country (something I thought they would never agree to). All they want is to ensure they won't get shafted in return. What's so unfair about that? Also, what are you planning to do about the power imbalance in the Middle East that is the cause of our worries today?
Israel have never acknowledge to being a nuclear weapons state. If that is such a concern, there would have been a hue and cry about it a very long time ago. Instead, all the muslim countries in the ME worries more about each other than about Israel. There is no 'power imbalance' and you know it.
So your democracy is more important than theirs?
Yes...Ours and Europe's, despite our flaws, are more legitimate in the people's eyes than the farce of elections in Cuba, the former Soviet Union, China and yes...Iran.
Is 63% not greater than 53%?
Not when it is a farce. See above.
Also, Hamid Karzai was re-elected as well, and his was a widely fraudulent election, but that doesn't stop you from working with him.
Do we have a choice? No more than our diplomats have to deal with China's leadership and their supposedly 'elected' leaders.
I can't speak for all your allies. I can certainly say, though, that the people of Ontario, Canada are quite sick of fighting wars they shouldn't be involved in. Ontario, incidentally, is the most populous province of Canada. Also, from what I read and hear, the Brits aren't too pleased about their involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan either. How many countries would be willing to go to war to stop Iran from developing weapons is questionable. Whether the Unites States has the stomach for it is also a valid question.
They are more than welcome to pressure their elected leaders to opt out of any US adventures. If their leaders does not heed their protests, that is not our problem. We work with leaders, not those who elected them. That is not a disdain for Canadians but the truth.