Showing posts with label ‘Nuclear. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ‘Nuclear. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Misread Telexes Led Analysts to See Iran Nuclear Arms Program


When Western intelligence agencies began in the early 1990s to intercept telexes from an Iranian university to foreign high technology firms, intelligence analysts believed they saw the first signs of military involvement in Iran’s nuclear program. That suspicion led to U.S. intelligence assessments over the next decade that Iran was secretly pursuing nuclear weapons.


The supposed evidence of military efforts to procure uranium enrichment equipment shown in the telexes was also the main premise of the International Atomic Energy Agency’s investigation of Iran’s nuclear program from 2003 through 2007.


But the interpretation of the intercepted telexes on which later assessments were based turned out to have been a fundamental error. The analysts, eager to find evidence of an Iranian nuclear weapons program, had wrongly assumed that the combination of interest in technologies that could be used in a nuclear program and the apparent role of a military-related institution meant that the military was behind the procurement requests.


In 2007-08, Iran provided hard evidence that the technologies had actually been sought by university teachers and researchers.


The intercepted telexes that set in train the series of US intelligence assessments that Iran was working on nuclear weapons were sent from Sharif University of Technology in Tehran beginning in late 1990 and continued through 1992. The dates of the telexes, their specific procurement requests and the telex number of PHRC were all revealed in a February 2012 paper by David Albright, the executive director of the Institute for Science and International Security, and two co-authors.


The telexes that interested intelligence agencies following them all pertained to dual-use technologies, meaning that they were consistent with work on uranium conversion and enrichment but could also be used for non-nuclear applications.


But what raised acute suspicions on the part of intelligence analysts was the fact that those procurement requests bore the telex number of the Physics Research Center (PHRC), which was known to have contracts with the Iranian military.


US, British, German and Israeli foreign intelligence agencies were sharing raw intelligence on Iranian efforts to procure technology for its nuclear program, according to published sources.


The telexes included requests for “high-vacuum” equipment, “ring” magnets, a balancing machine and cylinders of fluorine gas, all of which were viewed as useful for a program of uranium conversion and enrichment.


The Schenck balancing machine ordered in late 1990 or early 1991 provoked interest among proliferation analysts, because it could be used to balance the rotor assembly parts on the P1 centrifuge for uranium enrichment. The “ring” magnets sought by the university were believed to be appropriate for centrifuge production.


The request for 45 cylinders of fluorine gas was considered suspicious, because fluorine is combined with uranium to produce uranium hexafluoride, the form of uranium that used for enrichment.


The first indirect allusion to evidence from the telexes in the news came in late 1992, when an official of the George H. W. Bush administration told The Washington Post that the administration had pushed for a complete cutoff of all nuclear-related technology to Iran, because of what was called “a suspicious procurement pattern”.


Then the Iranian efforts to obtain those specific technologies from major foreign suppliers were reported, without mentioning the intercepted telexes, in a Public Broadcasting System “Frontline” documentary called “Iran and the Bomb” broadcast in April 1993, which portrayed them as clear indications of an Iranian nuclear weapons program.


The producer of the documentary, Herbert Krosney, described the Iranian procurement efforts in similar terms in his book “Deadly Business” published the same year.


In 1996, President Bill Clinton’s CIA Director John Deutch declared, “A wide variety of data indicate that Tehran has assigned civilian and military organizations to support the production of fissile material for nuclear weapons.”


For the next decade, the CIA’s non-proliferation specialists continued to rely on their analysis of the telexes to buttress their assessment that Iran was developing nuclear weapons. The top-secret 2001 National Intelligence Estimate bore the title “Iran Nuclear Weapons Program: Multifaceted and Poised to Succeed, but When?”


Former IAEA Deputy Director General for Safeguards Olli Heinonen recalled in a May 2012 article that the IAEA had obtained a “set of procurement information about the PHRC” – an obvious reference to the collection of telexes – which led him to launch an investigation in 2004 of what the IAEA later called the “Procurement activities by the former Head of PHRC”.


But after an August 2007 agreement between Iran and IAEA Director-General Mohamed ElBaradei on a timetable for the resolution of “all remaining issues”, Iran provided full information on all the procurement issues the IAEA had raised.


That information revealed that the former PHRC head, Sayyed Abbas Shahmoradi-Zavareh, who had been a professor at Sharif University at the time, had been asked by several faculty departments to help procure equipment or material for teaching and research.


Iran produced voluminous evidence to support its explanation for each of the procurement efforts the IAEA had questioned. It showed that the high vacuum equipment had been requested by the Physics Department for student experiments in evaporation and vacuum techniques for producing thin coatings by providing instruction manuals on the experiments, internal communications and even the shipping documents on the procurement.


The Physics Department had also requested the magnets for students to carry out “Lenz-Faraday experiments”, according to the evidence provided, including the instruction manuals, the original requests for funding and the invoice for cash sales from the supplier. The balancing machine was for the Mechanical Engineering Department, as was supported by similar documentation turned over to the IAEA. IAEA inspectors had also found that the machine was indeed located at the department.


The 45 cylinders of fluorine that Shahmoradi-Zavareh had tried to procure had been requested by the Office of Industrial Relations for research on the chemical stability of polymeric vessels, as shown by the original request letter and communications between the former PHRC head and the president of the university.


The IAEA report on February 2008 recorded the detailed documentation provided by Iran on each of the issues, none of which was challenged by the IAEA. The report declared the issue “no longer outstanding at this stage”, despite US pressure on ElBaradei to avoid closing that or any other issue in the work program, as reported in diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks.


The IAEA report showed that the primary intelligence basis for the US charge of an Iranian nuclear weapons program for more than a decade had been erroneous.


That dramatic development in the Iran nuclear story went unnoticed in news media reporting on the IAEA report, however. By then the US government, the IAEA and the news media had raised other evidence that was more dramatic – a set of documents supposedly purloined from an Iran laptop computer associated with an alleged covert Iranian nuclear weapons program from 2001 to 2003. And the November 2007 NIE had concluded that Iran had been running such a program but had halted it in 2003.


Despite the clear acceptance of the Iranian explanation by the IAEA, David Albright of ISIS has continued to argue that the telexes support suspicions that Iran’s Defense Ministry was involved in the nuclear program.


In his February 2012 paper, Albright discusses the procurement requests documented in the telexes as though the IAEA investigation had been left without any resolution. Albright makes no reference to the detailed documentation provided by Iran in each case or to the IAEA’s determination that the issue was “no longer outstanding”.


Ten days later, the Washington Post published a news article reflecting Albright’s claim that the telexes proved that the PHRC had been guiding Iran’s secret uranium enrichment program during the 1990s. The writer was evidently unaware that the February 2008 IAEA report had provided convincing evidence that the intelligence analyst’s interpretations had been fundamentally wrong.


Gareth Porter, an investigative historian and journalist specializing in US national security policy, received the UK-based Gellhorn Prize for journalism for 2011 for articles on the US war in Afghanistan. His new book Manufactured Crisis: the Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare, will be published in February 2014.


Inter Press Service


Read more by Gareth Porter





Antiwar.com Original



Misread Telexes Led Analysts to See Iran Nuclear Arms Program

As In the US, Iran’s Hardliners Aim to Derail Nuclear Talks



As In the US, Iran’s Hardliners Aim to Derail Nuclear Talks


Parliament Seeks Full ‘Oversight’ of Negotiations


by Jason Ditz, February 05, 2014




Hawks in the US Congress, particularly senators, have tried time and again to derail ongoing negotiations with Iran, aiming to maintain the multi-decade status quo of acrimony.


They’re not alone. Much as a lot of US Congressmen made their careers hawking on Iran, Iran’s parliament has no shortage of hawks who have played up the anti-US thing to great effect, and are hoping to derail the talks as well.


The rhetoric is almost a perfect mirror, with Iranian MPs insisting that everything the West has done proves they can’t be trusted, and they are trying to get themselves full oversight of the negotiations.


The House of Representatives in the US has tried the exact same thing, trying to dictate terms on the final pact (deliberately in ways Iran would never accept). The Iranian parliament has announced it intends to put an MP on the negotiating team too, suggesting they will be a thorn in the side of the actual negotiators at every round of talks going forward.


Last 5 posts by Jason Ditz






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As In the US, Iran’s Hardliners Aim to Derail Nuclear Talks

Monday, December 2, 2013

Indias Nuclear Scientists Keep Dying---Mysteriously. Whos Behind It?

I read an article and have done some research on the mysterious and ongoing deaths of many of India’s nuclear scientists. People that work in the nuclear field in India have packed up and left the country out of fear, which gives you an idea of how serious an issue this is.

An article from the Vice website points out:



Not only has the scientific community been plagued by “suicides,” unexplained deaths, and sabotage, but those incidents have gone mostly underreported in the country—diluting public interest and leaving the cases quickly cast off by police.



The two most recent deaths of men from the nuclear research community:



Last month, two high-ranking engineers—KK Josh and Abhish Shivam—on India’s first nuclear-powered submarine were found on railway tracks by workers. They were pulled from the line before a train could crush them, but were already dead. No marks were found on the bodies, so it was clear they hadn’t been hit by a moving train, and reports allege they were poisoned elsewhere before being placed on the tracks to make the deaths look either accidental or like a suicide. The media and the Ministry of Defence, however, described the incident as a routine accident and didn’t investigate any further.



The exact number of deaths is not known, but has only been quoted as “a long list.”


Many of the deaths are ruled as suicides, and those that don’t seem to fit that bill are listed as “unexplained” and not investigated again. Several families have contested the cause of death, but don’t appear to have gotten very far.


Who could be behind the deaths, if they are, in fact, murders? According to one article:



Two authors have alleged that the US have dabbled in sabotaging the country’s technological efforts in the past; China is in a constant soft-power battle with India; and the volatile relationship with Pakistan makes the country a prime suspect. “It could be any of them,” Madhav said.



Since the US has had a spree of similar deaths in our research communities, I find this issue to be very concerning—-and suspicious.


Even more alarming is that India is doing nothing to protects its scientists.


And why have they refused to really research these deaths?


Sources: www.vice.com…


news.oneindia.in…


edit on 2-12-2013 by MRuss because: (no reason given)




AboveTopSecret.com New Topics In General Conspiracies



Indias Nuclear Scientists Keep Dying---Mysteriously. Whos Behind It?

Sunday, December 1, 2013

My Interview With UFO/ET Researcher And Nuclear Physicist Stanton Friedman


fanof2012
Planet Infowars


My interview with UFO/ET researcher Stanton Friedman was a huge success despite the small audience since it was Thanksgiving Eve.


This post appeared in the Video category.


All of the views expressed are not necessarily endorsed by Infowars.com.


This article was posted: Sunday, December 1, 2013 at 1:43 pm









Infowars



My Interview With UFO/ET Researcher And Nuclear Physicist Stanton Friedman

Thursday, November 28, 2013

UK police bust $1 mn marijuana factory in historic underground nuclear bunker



Published time: November 28, 2013 19:13

Reuters / Anthony Bolante

Reuters / Anthony Bolante




The UK police has shut down a large, well-equipped cannabis factory worth over $ 1 million, hidden underground in the historic Drakelow Tunnels, which was used as a shelter for local government back in the 1950s in case of nuclear attack.


The police had to descend deep underground to close down the secret facility, hidden in the tunnels north of the English town of Kidderminster.


A total of 400 cannabis plants, worth around £650,000 (just over $ 1 million) according to preliminary estimates, were seized during the raid, the police said.


The operation, which took place Wednesday morning, involved 30 police officers and staff, including dog handlers.

“While executing the warrant at Drakelow Tunnels, we discovered a large and sophisticated cannabis growing operation,”
said Kevin Purcell, North Worcestershire Superintendent, local paper The Shuttle reported. “Although the plants will need to be tested, it would appear that this seizure has prevented a large quantity of illegal drugs ending up on the streets.”


The factory was well equipped, as it had plenty of hydroponic hardware, including heating, lighting and ventilation fans.


Prior to the raid, a 45-year-old man was arrested in Kidderminster on suspicion of money laundering and being involved in the production and supply of illegal drugs. 


The operation was part of a new three-year anti-drug strategy, which the local police began implementing in September, seeking the “reduction of supply and demand achieved through the identification and dismantling of trafficking and dealer networks, and the closure of drug factories or farms.”


The Drakelow Tunnels, dug in the early 1940s, are considered a monument to the UK’s military history.


The underground facility, with a floor space of 23,000 square meters amid tunnels stretching 6 kilometers, was used to produce machine parts during World War II.


In the late 1950s, the UK Home Office turned the tunnels into emergency government offices in case of a nuclear attack.


The current owner of Drakelow Tunnels has recently announced plans to turn the site into a museum.


Police officers were briefed in advance on the historic nature of the venue and the operation was carried out in a way to cause as little disturbance as possible within the complex, Purcell said.


Cannabis remains the most seized illegal drug in England. According to Home Office statistics, 12,267 kilograms of marijuana and 507,401 cannabis plants were confiscated by the police and border service last year.




RT – News



UK police bust $1 mn marijuana factory in historic underground nuclear bunker

Monday, November 25, 2013

D.C. cops go ‘nuclear’ with traffic cameras


Andrea Noble
Washington Times
November 25, 2013


Traffic camera on a traffic light pole, via Wikimedia Commons

Traffic camera on a traffic light pole, via Wikimedia Commons



A drivers’ advocacy group is decrying the latest expansion of the District’s automated traffic enforcement program.

D.C. police activated 100 new “next-generation” traffic cameras Saturday to target a growing number of motorist violations ranging from failure to stop for pedestrians in crosswalks to blocking the box.


The new cameras boost the number of automated traffic enforcement devices operated by the Metropolitan Police Department to nearly 300 cameras — an expansion that AAA Mid-Atlantic called the “nuclear option.”


Read more


This article was posted: Monday, November 25, 2013 at 12:26 pm


Tags: big brother, domestic spying









Infowars



D.C. cops go ‘nuclear’ with traffic cameras

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Nuclear Agreement May Result in Israel and Saudi Arabia Attacking Iran


Mossad worked closely with Saudi royals on war preparations


Kurt Nimmo
Infowars.com
November 24, 2013


Israel and Saudi Arabia may cooperate in an attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities following the announcement of a six-month interim agreement between the P5+1 and Iran on Sunday in Geneva. Javad Zarif, Iran’s foreign minister, characterized the agreement as a major success. He said Iran will cooperate with the United Nations’ International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Iran’s recently elected president, Hassan Rouhani, said the agreement is evidence the world now recognizes Iran has nuclear rights.


“While today’s announcement is just a first step, it achieves a great deal,” the Obama administration said in a statement. “For the first time in nearly a decade, we have halted the progress of the Iranian nuclear program, and key parts of the program will be rolled back.” Obama added a caveat. He said the United States will “ratchet up” sanctions if Iran fails to follow the agreement. Secretary of State John Kerry, who represented the United States at the conference in Geneva, said Iran has yet to demonstrate that it is not seeking to build a nuclear weapon.


The agreement stipulates that Iran will stop enriching uranium over 5% and dismantle its stockpile of 20% enriched uranium. A nuclear weapon requires uranium enriched over 90%. In addition to IAEA inspections, Iran has also agreed to stop construction on its heavy water reactor at Arak.


Officials in Israel reacted predictably after the deal was reached. “What was concluded in Geneva last night is not a historic agreement, it’s a historic mistake,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned. “It’s not made the world a safer place. Like the agreement with North Korea in 2005, this agreement has made the world a much more dangerous place.” The Saudi royals also expressed outrage.


Israel Working With Saudis On Attack Plan


Earlier this month, the Sunday Times reported that Saudi Arabia agreed to allow Israel use of its air space. The Saudis said they would provide drones, tanker planes and helicopters for an Israeli attack on Iran. The newspaper said Mossad was working closely with Saudi intelligence and they were making preparations in the event a deal was reached in Switzerland. “Once the Geneva agreement is signed, the military option will be back on the table. The Saudis are furious and are willing to give Israel all the help it needs,” a source said.


Netanyahu and Israeli officials attempted to persuade the United States to reject a compromise. The Israeli president said any agreement would directly threaten the existence of his country.


“It is highly unlikely that the Saudis and Israelis would want to attack Iran because at the end of the day both countries would be losers, they would be seen as aggressors and obviously the Iranians would retaliate,” Iranian political analyst Seyed Mohammad Marandi said after the Sunday Times published its report. “It would create an economic catastrophe for the world and only the Saudis and the Israelis would be to blame.”


Egyptian officials, according to WorldNetDaily reporter and blogger Aaron Klein, confirmed that Israeli personnel recently visited Saudi Arabia and inspected military bases. “The officials said Israel, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Jordan and other Arab and Persian Gulf countries have been discussing the next steps toward possible strikes on Iran’s nuclear sites,” Klein writes today.


Klein also notes the United States told Israel and the Saudis it controls radar capabilities over Iran and that no strike should be launched without permission from the Obama administration.


Hezbollah May Respond If Attack Unfolds


In October, it was reported that Israel was considering attacking Hezbollah positions in southern Lebanon to take out its missile capability. The Shia military organization has “more than 200,000 missiles capable of hitting any house in Israel,” according to Israeli Home Front Minister Gilad Erdan. Military experts, however, put the number closer to 45,000 missiles and rockets. IDF Deputy Chief of Staff Yair Naveh claims Hezbollah has at around 60,000 rockets and missiles in its arsenal, or about ten times the number it had during Israel’s 34-day invasion of Lebanon in 2006.


Hezbollah Secretary-General Seyyed Hassan Nasrallah met with Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister for Arab and African Affairs Hossein Amir-Abdollahian last week after the Iranian embassy was attacked in Beirut. Iranian Ambassador to Lebanon Ghazanfar Roknabadi told Hezbollah’s al-Manar TV station “the Zionist entity” was responsible for the attack.


The Abdullah Azzam brigades, an al-Qaeda-linked group, claimed responsibility for the blast that killed at least 23 people and wounded more than 150 others.


This article was posted: Sunday, November 24, 2013 at 12:48 pm









Infowars



Nuclear Agreement May Result in Israel and Saudi Arabia Attacking Iran

Netanyahu ‘promises’ Iran will not get nuclear weapons


HERB KEINON
jpost.com
November 24, 2013


Even as world powers’ talks with Iran continued on Thursday, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu made clear a “bad” agreement would not obligate Israel and promised that Iran would not get nuclear weapons.


“The Iranians deny our past and repeat their commitment to wipe the State of Israel off the map. This reminds us of the dark regimes of the past that plotted against us first and then against all of humanity,” he said to a gathering of local Jewish leaders.
Related:


Netanyahu said that the “true” Iran was not the one of propaganda films produced by Foreign Minister Javad Zarif smiling and speaking about a peaceful future, but rather that of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei calling Jews “rabid dogs.” Khamenei, at a rally in Iran on Wednesday, called Israel an “illegitimate regime” led by “untouchable rabid dogs.”


Read more


This article was posted: Sunday, November 24, 2013 at 9:42 am


Tags: foreign affairs, technology, terrorism, war









Infowars



Netanyahu ‘promises’ Iran will not get nuclear weapons

Friday, November 1, 2013

Israel lobby trying to ‘undermine’ Iran nuclear talks – Press TV

Israel has been trying to “undermine” ongoing nuclear negotiations between Iran and the world powers by putting more pressure on the United States to toughen sanctions against Tehran, an analyst says.



Link for the four minute audio interview is here. Embed would not work for some reason.


342x256_JimDeanPressTV

342x256_JimDeanPressTV



___________________________


In an interview with Press TV on Thursday, Veterans Today columnist Jim Dean said there are some efforts by the Israel lobby in the US for using “military option” against Iran.


However, he said, the United States is now focusing on the peace in the Middle East because it is “critical” to Washington’s “economic survival.”


The US Senate is ratcheting up pressure on the White House to tighten sanctions against Iran in line with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s demand for more pressure against Tehran.


On Monday, Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Robert Menendez (D-NJ) said that the Senate aims to cut Iran’s current oil exports to 500,000 barrels per day.


Iran held nuclear talks with the United States, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany in Geneva earlier this month. The two sides are set to meet again in Geneva on November 7-8.


Meanwhile, US Secretary of State John Kerry defended the talks with Iran in an apparent rejection of Netanyahu’s demand for more pressure against Tehran.


The top US diplomat said “some have suggested that somehow there’s something wrong” with giving diplomacy a chance. “We will not succumb to those fear tactics and forces that suggest otherwise,” Kerry said.



________________________________




Veterans Today



Israel lobby trying to ‘undermine’ Iran nuclear talks – Press TV

Thursday, October 24, 2013

FEMA evaluating county response to Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant emergency


Beginning this week, the Federal Emergency Management Agency is evaluating state and local emergency planning and preparedness agencies’ abilities to respond to an emergency at Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant in Lusby.


“These drills are held every other year to test government’s ability to protect public health and safety,” MaryAnn Tierney, regional administrator for FEMA Region III, said in a FEMA news release. “We will evaluate state and local emergency response capabilities within the 10-mile emergency-planning zone of the nuclear facility.”  



This exercise is part of FEMA’s Radiological Emergency Preparedness program, which ensures the health and safety of citizens living around commercial nuclear power plants is adequately protected in the event of a nuclear accident, according to the release. The program, however, only covers off-site activities, such as state and local emergency planning and preparedness, the release states.


The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission is responsible for activities within the nuclear power plant’s boundaries.


Within 90 days, FEMA will send its evaluation to the NRC for licensing decisions, and about 120 days after the exercise, the final report will be available to the public, the release states.


At 11 a.m. Friday, Oct. 25, FEMA will present its preliminary findings of the emergency preparedness exercise during a public meeting at the Sheraton of Annapolis, 173 Jennifer Road, Annapolis. Speakers include representatives from FEMA, the NRC and the state.


At the meeting, FEMA may request questions and/or comments be submitted in writing for review and response by emailing FEMAR3NewsDesk@fema.dhs.gov or by mail to MaryAnn Tierney, Regional Administrator, FEMA Region III, 615 Chestnut St., 6th floor, Philadelphia, PA 19106.


AMANDA SCOTT


http://www.somdnews.com/article/20131023/NEWS/131029794/1045/fema-evaluating-county-response-to-calvert-cliffs-nuclear-power-plant&template=southernMaryland


Sent to us by Field McConnell who said: “What are the chances that on United Nations Day all of Congress would be herded into Air Force aircraft in the middle of a Nuclear Exercise by FEMA in Calvert Cliffs, MD?”






FEMA evaluating county response to Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant emergency

Saturday, October 19, 2013

Team Of Nuclear Experts Arrives In Japan

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Team Of Nuclear Experts Arrives In Japan

Monday, September 23, 2013

51 UN Countries Vote to Keep Israel’s Nuclear Arsenal Hidden from Public View

21st Century Wire says…With all of the 24/7 righteous indignation about weapons of mass destruction in Syria and call for ‘compliance with international norms’, the mainstream media barely mentioned this week’s UN vote on whether or not Israel should enter the international community by allowing nuclear weapons inspectors to see what its been hiding for decades now – a full-blown nuclear weapons program.



Hiding a military nuclear arsenal is no small feat. What this latest US-led lobbying effort in the UN demonstrates clearly, is that the State of Israel, shielded by its chief backers the United States, Great Britain and France, maintains its own set of rules outside of international laws and norms.

One might ask the question: does Israel plan to use its nukes on any other countries? If not, why does it need to maintain them, and in secret?


Along with the US, Israel has already threatened to attack Iran on the basis that Iran might, one day, build a nuclear weapon. Both the US and Israel say this would be a “pre-emptive strike” - just in case Iran might attack Israel at some point in the future, even though Iran, unlike Israel, has no history of aggression against any of its regional neighbors. In fact, the State of Israel was founded upon unwarranted aggression, terrorist bombings and ethnic cleaning programs targeting native Palestinian Arabs who previously lived within its ever-expanding borders.


This is the definition of a triple standard,


Daily Sheeple reported:


“Of the 94 countries that voted on the resolution to force Israel to join the nuclear non-proliferation treaty, 51 voted against the proposal. Interestingly ALL the Middle Eastern States were in favor of Israel joining, with the United States, Britain and the European nations forming the majority that voted against it”…


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WHAT REALLY HAPPENED



51 UN Countries Vote to Keep Israel’s Nuclear Arsenal Hidden from Public View

Monday, August 12, 2013

Moscow, Tehran to sign agreement on building new nuclear power plant – Iranian FM


The reactor building at the Russian-built Bushehr nuclear power plant in southern Iran, 1200 kms south of Tehran. (Reuters/Mehr News Agency/Majid Asgaripour)
The reactor building at the Russian-built Bushehr nuclear power plant in southern Iran, 1200 kms south of Tehran. (Reuters/Mehr News Agency/Majid Asgaripour)


Moscow and Tehran will soon sign an agreement on the construction of a new nuclear power plant in the Islamic Republic, Iran’s Foreign Minister announced.


“Iran has held consultations with the Russian side and soon an agreement of mutual understanding will be signed on the construction of a new nuclear power plant,” Ali Akbar Salehi, Iranian foreign minister and former nuclear chief, said on Sunday.


He reiterated that Iran’s nuclear program is purely peaceful, as the country needs nuclear power for electricity generation and medicine.


The statement comes ahead of the first meeting between Iran’s newly elected President Hassan Rouhani and Russian President Vladimir Putin on September 13. The talks are part of a Eurasian summit taking place in Kyrgyzstan’s capital of Bishkek, a Russian presidential aide said Friday.


“After Rouhani’s election as president, the Iranian government sent us a proposal to hold a Rouhani-Putin meeting within the framework of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit in Bishkek,” Yury Ushakov said.


Last month, Russian business daily Kommersant cited anonymous sources which said that Vladimir Putin may visit Tehran to meet Hassan Rouhani in mid-August.


Rouhani was sworn in on August 4 and replaced Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as head of Iranian government.


During his first press conference on Tuesday, Rouhani said that Iran would continue negotiations with Russia on nuclear power development in the country.


“We need to get 20,000 megawatts of nuclear power. We have been negotiating on this. I hope that everything will develop according to schedule, and Iran will be able to continue to build nuclear power plants and continue to cooperate. The Iranian government will continue to negotiate with neighboring countries, one of which is Russia, to develop peaceful nuclear energy,” he said.


Russian parliament speaker Sergey Naryshkin said during his visit to Iran on August 4 that Russia intends to expand cooperation in civilian nuclear power after Iran’s nuclear power plant at Bushehr is fully commissioned in September.


The construction of Bushehr – the first civilian nuclear plant in the Middle East – was started in 1975 by German companies, but the work was stopped in 1979 after the Islamic revolution of Iran. A contract for finishing the plant was signed between Iran and the Russian Ministry for Atomic Energy in 1995.


Bushehr nuclear power plant launched in 2011 has no link to nuclear weapons production and cannot be used to develop such technology.


The US and its allies have long accused Iran of seeking to develop a nuclear weapons capability – a claim which Tehran has repeatedly denied.


Several rounds of talks between Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany have failed to resolve the dispute. Iran’s critics claim the country has used nuclear negotiations as a delaying tactic while continuing to develop nuclear weapons technology behind closed doors. Tehran insists its nuclear program is for entirely peaceful purposes.


Source: RT


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End the Lie – Independent News



Moscow, Tehran to sign agreement on building new nuclear power plant – Iranian FM

Monday, May 27, 2013

Japan must continue efforts to deactivate Fukushima nuclear plant – UN agency


UN.org
May 27, 2013


Although Japan has made progress towards stabilizing the damaged reactors of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant crippled by a devastating earthquake two years ago, there are still issues to be resolved before it can begin its deactivation, the United Nations atomic agency said in a report released today.


The report was released after an expert team from the UN International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) completed an initial review of Japan’s efforts to implement a Mid-and-Long-Term Roadmap to decommission the Fukushima Daiichi power plant. The visit was the first of what is planned to be a two-mission review, at the request of the Japanese Government.


“Our final report reflects that the Roadmap was developed early after the accident and that Japanese workers have achieved reasonable stable cooling of the damaged reactor cores and spent fuel pools,” said the Director of the IAEA’s Division of Nuclear Fuel Cycle and Waste Technology, Juan Carlos Lentijo.


Read full article


This article was posted: Monday, May 27, 2013 at 12:46 pm


Tags: radiation









Infowars



Japan must continue efforts to deactivate Fukushima nuclear plant – UN agency