Sunday, May 31, 2015

Iranian military sites must be inspected in any final nuclear deal



By Iran reporter
April 1th 12015
recently reviled that despite the clerical regime's claim of wanting to seal a deal with the world powers, they are secretly cooperating with the North Koreans who are clearly defying the international demands for giving up their nuclear weapons' program.
The NCRI declared that the Iranian regime and the North Koreans have been engaged in extensive exchange of information and visits by their respective experts on nuclear weapons and nuclear warhead design as recently as April 2015. The NCRI has provided detailed account of these visits including a visit to North Korea in 2013 of Tehran’s top nuclear weapons experts headed by elusive Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, who was present during the last nuclear test conducted by the North Korean government.
During these visits, the two sides discuss and exchange plans and provide assistances and consultations in the areas of aerodynamics, missile body design, and electronic components of warheads.
On the other front, the mullahs' regime is extensively involved in the nuclear talks with the west speeding toward the June 30th deadline after nearly two years of back and forth visits and negotiations. The last meeting between the US delegation led by Secretary John Kerry and Iranian regime's foreign minister, Zarif ended on Saturday, May 30, 2015 in Geneva without reaching a tangible result and as the news agencies described "with no breakthrough."
Tehran has rejected a key Western demand for the inspections of specific sites i.e. suspected military sites. Access to such sites has been considered pivotal to any transparent deal, if there could ever be one.
According to the Iranian Resistance and the NCRI who have unveiled numerous illicit activities by the clerical regime ruling Iran, Tehran has been conducting tests on nuclear trigger mechanism at its military sites.
Yukiya Amano, the head of the UN atomic watchdog agency, IAEA said this week that if Iran signs a nuclear deal with the world powers it will have to accept inspections of its military sites.
Mr. Amano added that Iran had agreed to implement the Additional Protocol of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty that allows for snap inspections.
"When we find inconsistency or when we have doubts, we can request access to the undeclared location for example, and this could include military sites," he said.
Despite all that, Iran is denying the IAEA access to its sensitive sites and rejects any interviews with its nuclear scientists. This has made the whole deal up in the air and uncertain.
If Iran is rejecting the inspection of its suspected nuclear sites including its military sites, and if it is forbidden to interview Iran's nuclear scientists, then how can the world be sure that the mullahs are not going to fool them again and come up with an Atom bomb in just a few short months after a deal is reached, and who with the right mind would invest even a penny on the mullahs' deceptive words that a so called "Islamic decree" by the blood thirsty Supreme Leader is going to keep the godfather of terrorism and ISIS from acquiring a nuclear bomb?
The Iranian regime needs to export its internal social crisis outside of the country by dominating the Middle East region, but unfortunately Obama's administration try to negotiate with them,   giving the mullahs in Iran the concession that the US has been giving so far is not only detrimental to the security of the region, but to the security of the entire world.
 And over all, the Iranian military sites must be inspected in any final nuclear deal, and the main opposition group, Mujahedin-e-khalg with NCRI as its   parliament in exile should be supported by the world community to get rid of such harmful phenomena

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