http://pamelageller.com/2014/11/iranian-negotiator-u-s-must-bow-to-our-inalienable-nuclear-rights.html/


Iranian Negotiator: U.S. Must Bow to Our ‘Inalienable Nuclear Rights’

[image: Obama-Bows]

*The U.S. must bow? Obama is on it*.

[image: obamabow2]
<http://pullzone1.atlas.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/obamabow2.jpg>

“Iranian Negotiator: U.S. Must Bow to Our ‘Inalienable Nuclear Rights,’” by
Adam Kredo, Washington Free Beacon
<http://freebeacon.com/national-security/iranian-negotiator-u-s-must-bow-to-our-inalienable-nuclear-rights/>,
November 12, 2014:

Iran’s foreign minister and lead negotiator in nuclear talks said this week
that the United States must bow to Iran’s “inalienable nuclear rights” and
hinted that *Western countries are being fooled about the extent of
concessions being made by Tehran in talks*, according to regional media
reports.

Despite Western media reports and indications from the Obama administration
that Iran may be moderating its hardline position, there has been “no
change in Iran’s rigid stance on its inalienable nuclear rights,” according
to comments made Tuesday by Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif and
reported in Iran’s state-controlled-media.

“Some [western] countries have fallen prey to miscalculations [about Iran’s
position] due to wrong analyses,” Zarif was quoted as saying on the heels
of another round of talks with the United States and other Western
countries ahead of the Nov. 24 deadline.

U.S. sanctions against Iran “have left no impact” on Iran’s desire to
“possess the civilian nuclear technology,” Iran’s Fars News Agency reported
Zarif as saying. The foreign minister also framed the controversy over
Iran’s nuclear weapons program as a “manufactured crisis.”

Zarif’s comments highlight the gaps that remain between Tehran and the West
as negotiations approach their deadline. As Iran digs in over the right to
enrich uranium, the key fuel in a nuclear bomb, the Obama administration
has indicated that it may be willing to accede to this demand.

Leading congressional opponents of a deal that permits Iran to continue
enriching uranium said on Wednesday that Congress will pass new sanctions
if the Obama administration concedes to this demand from Tehran.

“As co-authors of bipartisan sanctions laws that compelled Iran to the
negotiating table, we believe that a good deal will dismantle, not just
stall, Iran’s illicit nuclear program and prevent Iran from ever becoming a
threshold nuclear weapons state,” Sens. Mark Kirk (R., Ill.) and Robert
Menendez (D., N.J.) said in a joint statement.

“If a potential deal does not achieve these goals, we will work with our
colleagues in Congress to act decisively, as we have in the past,” the two
senators said.

Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R., Fla.) also warned on Wednesday that the Obama
administration is on the cusp of permitting Iran to continue its most
controversial nuclear work.

“A deal that allows Iran to enrich any uranium and to keep in place a
nuclear infrastructure is a bad deal,” Ros-Lehtinen said on the House
floor. “As long as Iran maintains the capability to enrich uranium, it can
create a nuclear weapon.”

“As the deadline looms, and as Republicans are set to control Congress, I
urge my colleagues to not allow President Obama to trade away the only
leverage we have over the mullahs in Tehran in exchange for minor and
easily reversible modifications by Iran on its nuclear weapons program,”
Ros-Lehtinen said.

With less than two weeks before talks are scheduled to end, new evidence
indicates that Iran’s nuclear program is more advanced than previously
known—and that Tehran is making a concerted effort to keep this fact a
secret.

“We don’t know where they [Iran] are today, and that’s why it’s important
the [International Atomic Energy Agency] verifies from the very beginning
the actual inventory of the centrifuges and the consumption of the
material,” Olli Heinonen, a former deputy director general of the IAEA,
said in a recent conference call with reporters.

Iran, Heinonen revealed, has in its possession at least 4,000 advanced
nuclear centrifuges that it has been hiding from the West.

This technology allows Iran to enrich uranium about five times faster than
older model centrifuges and potentially means that Tehran’s program is
vastly more advanced than Western officials thought.

“These centrifuges are five times more powerful than the current IR-1
[centrifugues],” Heinonen said on a conference call organized by the Israel
Project (TIP). “So these 4,000 centrifuges actually are altogether like the
enrichment power now in Natanz [nuclear site] with the IR-1s.”

The existence of these advanced centrifuges could significantly speed up
the time it will take Iran to reach the nuclear tipping point.

“If you take, you know, 1,000 of these centrifuges and just as a kind of
thumb rule, if you have 1,000 of these centrifuges and you start with
natural uranium, at the end of that one year you have enough material for
one nuclear device at least,” Heinonen explained. “If you take 2,000 of
those centrifuges and natural uranium, it will be half a year. If you take
4,000 of them, it will be three months if you start from natural uranium.”

However, since Iran already has significant stockpiles of low-enriched
uranium, it can reach the nuclear breakout point even quicker.

*With about 4,000 of these advanced centrifuges in operation, it would take
Iran just one month to produce a nuclear device using low-enriched uranium*,
Heinonen said.

One senior GOP aide working on the Iran portfolio called Heinonen’s
revelations “blockbusters.”

Because of their size and power, these advanced centrifuges have a “smaller
footprint and make a clandestine facility much easier to build,” the source
warned.

Heinonen also accused the Obama administration of setting “a very bad
precedent” by allowing Iran to break the rules and still potentially be
rewarded with a sweetheart deal.

“The bad thing is that there is a country which is in non-compliance [with
established regulations] with its safeguards undertaking and it is allowed
to continue uranium enrichment before it has really proved that it has
adhered to the agreements,” he said. “So this is a very bad precedent and
undermines I think the authority of the non-proliferation regime and the
authority of the United Nations Security Council.”…




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