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Why a New Deal with Iran Will Not Be the Solution

Questionable Integrity

By Mark Rollins, published Jun 15, 2006
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There is great risk in making a deal with someone who is not of questionable integrity. Case in point: the new United Nations deal with Iran. According to the AP Press, “a package of incentives presented to Iran includes a provision for the United States to supply Tehran with some nuclear technology if it stops enriching uranium”. For years, the Iranian government has denied any allegation that their experiments with uranium have a nuclear weapons agenda, and has reiterated that Iran has the right to conduct nuclear experiments that will eventually be used to provide energy. 

Unfortunately, their actions have proved the contrary. For example, their longstanding refusal to give any nuclear plant information to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is more than a legitimate cause for alarm. This uncompromising and secretive stance was in clear violation of the Nonproliferation Treaty of the United Nations. 

Suspicion was even more raised on October 26 last year, when Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad spoke at a seminar entitled “World Without Zion”. Ahmadinejad said that the Jewish state had to be wiped off the face of the earth. The president also praised the policy of the late Ruhollah Khomeini saying that “in his crusade against the World Arrogance, our dear Imam targeted the central and command base of the enemy, namely the occupying regime in Jerusalem”. The “World Arrogance” he refers to is the United States, and shows that the leader has clearly ruled out any peace process. 

Despite two years of Iran’s questionable stance on atomic power and open hostility toward Jerusalem, the European Union has still argued that the best way to persuade the Iranians to give up their nuclear program is to pursue a "negotiated solution". The negotiation has now entered a new phase as U.N. foreign policy chief Javier Solana prepares to offer Nuclear Power in exchange for the dismantlement of nuclear weapons. 

Takeaways
  • Right now, the nuclear situation of Iran is very suspicious, yet is receiving little media coverage.
  • Can we really offer nuclear power to those who may want to build nuclear weapons?
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